Winder weekly news. (Winder, Jackson County, Ga.) 18??-1909, June 25, 1908, Image 7
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.
v
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 30=64.
DIRECTORY
Methodist Episcopal Church,
Rev. A. W. Quillian, Tastor. Preaching
every Sunday at 11:30 a. m. and 8 p. m.
Sunday School 10:30 a. m., 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. m.
and Bp. m. Sunday School 10:30 a. in.
Claud Mayne, Superintendent. Prayer
meeting every Thursday evening at usual
hour.
* Baptist Church,
"Rev. R. U. DeeWeese, Pastor. Preaen
every 2nd and 4th Sunday at 11:3o a. m.
and Bp. in.. Sunday School 10:30 a. tn.
W. 1,.' Blassingaine, Superintendent.
Prayer every Wednesday even
ing at usual hour.
Presbyterian Church.
Services on the Ist and 3d Sundays ar
11 a. tu. and at 8:30 p. tn. Rev. Fritz
Rauschenburg, pastor. Sunday school
e.\ery Sunday at 10:30 a. m. W. H.
Quarterman, Superintrndent.
Holiness Church.
Preaching second Sunday at 11 a. in.
and 7:30 p. m. Rev. and Mrs. Graham,
pastors. Sunday school every Sunday
at 3:30 p.m. T. J. Morgan, Superin..
£ tendent. Prayer meeting every Satur
dav and Sunday’ nights at 8 p. in. Fv
erybody invited.
Winder No. 333, F. & A. M.
Meets ever 2d Friday night over Winder
Banking Cos. H. C. Mayne, W. M.; G.
W. Woo rl rUi7, S. W.; L. S. Radford. J.
W.; P\. W. Boudurand, S. D.: A. P.
Copeland, . D.; R. D. Moore, Secretary’;
1. J. Hall, Tyler.
Russell Lodge No. 99, K. of P.
P. W. Bondurant, C. C.; J. H. Turner
V. C ; B A. Julian, Prelate; F E Durst,
K of R and Sand M of F; J E < allahan,
M of W; H F. Milli Kin, M A; H P .Stan
ton, I G; K C McDonald, O G
Winder Lodge No. 81, I. 0. 0. F.
S T Maughon. N S; I ECall .han, V G;
t N B Lord RS: RL Griffeth, FS; W J
Smith, Treas
Navajo Tribe No. 42, I. 0. R. M.
Meets every 2nd and 4th Monday nights
R L GrifTeth, Sachem; J C Pentecost
Sr Sagatnore; C H Cook, Jr Sagamore
E A Starr, G of R;
Camp Joseph E. Johnson U. C. V
Meets every 3rd Saturday evening
at 8 p. m., nun 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 ever}’ Wednes
day after the third Sunday in each
month.
City Directory.
Mayor, J. T. Strange; Council
men, J. J. Wilson, J. B. Williams.
G.W. McDonald, T. A. Robinson
At Large A. A. Camp, H. S.
Segars.
WANTED
One thousand pairs of sec
ond hand shoes in the next
sixty days.
F. Hofmeister,
Winder, Ga.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
J. F. HOLMES,
ATTOKN KY-AT-LAW,
Statham, Ga.
Criminal and Commercial Law a
Specialty.
SPURGEON WILLIAMS
DENTIST,
Winder ... Georgia
Offices over Smith & Oarithers
bank. All work done satisfac
torily,
W. H. QUARTERMAN
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Winder, Ga.
Practice in all the courts
Commercial law a specialty.
W. L. DeLaPERRIERE
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 Ga.
Winder Train Schedules
4rrival and Departure of Trains
Eastern Time.
Taking effect Sunday Jan. 5, 08.
Eastern Time is 88 minutes fas
ter than Sun Time.
SEABOARD AIR LINE
RAILWAY.
EASTWARD.
No. 52, - - 10:08 a m
No. 82, - - 2:sopm
No 38, - - 10:85 pm
Westward.
No. 41, - - 5:29 a m
No. 38, - - 8:50 pm
No. 58, - - 7:48 pm
Above schedules are shown as infor
mation, and are not guaranteed.”
Gainesville Midland Railway
SOUTH BOUND
No. 11 —Lv 8:40 a. m.
No. 18 —Lv. 1:15 p. m
No. 15 —Lv. 10:85 am; Sunday
only.
NORTH BOUND
No. 12 —At. 12:00 m.
No. 14 —A l . : 505 p m.
No. 1(L —A-. 5:28 p m ; Sun.onlv.
No. 12 will run to Winder re
gardless of No. 18.
Yard limits at Winder are ex
tended “south” to Seaboard Air
Line junction.
All trains going through Winder
yard must he under full control.
KILL the COUCH
AND CURE the LUNGS
w,th Dr. King’s
New Discovery
FOR Colds 8 JBk.
AND A LL THROAT AND LUNG TROUBLES.
GUAEANTEED SATISFACTORY
OR MONET REFUNDED.
SHORT STORIES.
Red haired persons are usually Im
pulsive and outspoken.
The estate of David Valentine has
been settled at Fall River, Mass., after
having been in the courts 102 years.
A building in Calais. Me., now used
as a moving picture theater and for
merly as a prize fighting arena was
originally a church.
Elmer Barnard of Orlando. Me., cap
tured a sturgeon nine feet long, weigh
ing 400 pounds, in his weir recently.
It is said to be the first sturgeon taken
in the Penobscot in ten years.
A cane has been presented to the
governor of Virginia that is a souvenir
of two battlefields. The cane is of
hickory and was cut from the famous
field of Chancellorsvllle, and the han
dle is a deer foot, the animal being
killed in the Wilderness.
The most remarkable ail field in the
world is at Summerland. Cal., which
is really in the sea and where oil is
pumped from beneath the surf. There
are now about 200 producing wells
there, and they average about five
barrels of oil a day.
Stolen Bases.
Infielder Shaefer of the Detroit.®! is
unquestionably the greatest comedian
today among ball players.
This is Frank Chance’s tenth year in
baseball. In all of this time Chance
has remained a member of the Chicago
Nationals.
Walter Manning of the Xew York
Americans seems to have the right
stuff in him to make a success of the
big league pitching job.
Pitcher Campbell of the Cincinnati
Rgds has no love for St. Louis. He
says his turndown by that club in
1905 put him back three years iu his
advancement in the profession.
When a pitcher gets as, old as Cy
Young one does not expect him to
spring anything new on the batters,
but it is claimed Cy is using more
curve balls this year than be ever did.
German Gleanings.
One of the large electrical firms in
Germany gives yearly from $4 to $7 to
employees who have served for more
than a year. The sum thus expended
exceeds SIIO,OOO a year.
The table linen of the Prussian royal
family and likewise, of the reigning
houses of Baden, Saxony, Bavaria and
Wurttemberg is made at one particular
factory devoted to the purpose at Biele
feld.
Anew German law provides that the
German language shall be used at all
public meetings in all parts of the em
pire. This is part of the systematic
effort to bring about the Germaniza
tion of Alsace, German Poland and the
Danish districts of Schleswig-Holstein.
The number of people affected is about
4,500,000.
Flippant Flings.
Then, too, those Lamentations of Job
were written long before anybody ever
struck out with the bases full.—Atlan
ta Journal.
Jupiter’s eighth satellite has just
been discovered, and just to think how
long and how nicely we got along with
out it!—Lorain (O.) Times-Herald.
The short and simple annals of the
poor in Georgia now read "jug, jig,
jag, jugged,” and prohibition goes
marching on.—Louisville Courier-Jour
nal.
Brag about your “Merry Widows”
all you want to, but you just ought to
see some of the contraptions men wear
on their heads in lodge rooms.—Galves
ton News.
Flower and Tree.
An orange tree will continue to bear
fruit until it is 150 years old.
The leaf of the cocoanut tree is near
ly thirty feet long, while a single leaf
of the parasol magnolia of Ceylon will
shelter fifteen or twenty persons.
The Inaj palm is the tree which is
distinguished for having the largest
leaves. They often reach a length of
fifty feet and are from ten to twelve
feet in width.
If you wish flower cuttings to bloom
while the plants are small put them iu
small crocks. As soon as the crocks
are filled with roots they begin bloom
ing, especially geraniums,
_ Not Necessary.
Mrs. Noseigb Jane, you haven’t
washed the front windows in over a
week,
Jane —No'm. I didn’t think it neces
sary since the neighbors across the
street moved away.—Bohemian Maga
zine.
No Need For Anxiety.
Facetious Amateur* Fisherman I
suppose the next thing the fish will
all be muzzled.
Professional Angler—Oh, you have
no need to worry. They won’t bite.—
Baltimore American.
A woman seldom realizes that she
has a good figure until her friends
begin to find fault with it.
THE WHISPER.
Of all the various modes of speech
Which polished art and nature teach
Tlu whisper plays its part the best
With hints—which let you guess the
rest.
That (rnther Irish! wary ‘‘VV!' l 3t”'
That (rather ancient) caution “Hist!”
The modern “Hush!" all warn you lest—
Well, whisper—you can guess the rest.
Folks say that it is very rude.
It is when generally viewed.
Still, when a mans a social p'st
Just whisper—he will guess the rest.
Bores, tattlers, gossipers and such.
Who know, or think they do, too
much—
If you would stop them I'd suggest
A whispered hint—they'll guess the
rest.
—La Touche Hancock in New York
Press.
Proof.
era
"Do you know that your chickens
come over into my garden?”
‘‘l thought they must be doing that.”
"Why did you think so?”
“Because they never come back.”—
Cleveland Leader.
His Revenge.
Shirley Brooks, one time editor of
Punch, was noted for his whimsical
humor.
“It annoys me,” he said one day, “if
1 am discourteously treated at the
threshold of a friend’s door. I remem
ber once calling on someone, and the
maid, in her rudest manner, told me
he was not in and shut the door in my
face. 1 felt I must be revenged upou
her somehow, so I returned after an
interval of five minutes, rang the bell
and in my meekest manner mildly
said, ‘Did 1 say he was?’”
Practical Scaling.
“Look here, Lucy.” exclaimed Mr.
Hardapple; “this is no time to be prac
ticing on the piano. It’S time to pre
pare dinner.”
“But, pa, lain interested in scales,”
pouted Lucy as she pounded the keys.
“Interested in scales, eh? Well, I’ve
a task for you. Go down in the kitch
en and help your ma scale fish.”—De
troit Tribune.
Their Achievements.
“He had three daughters. One mar
ried a French chauffeur” —
“I see! Quite romantic.”
“The second married an Indian, a de
scendant of a chieftain”—
“I see! Quite aboriginal.”
“But the third married a plain Amer
ican business man.”
“H’m! Merely eccentric, I should
say.”—Puck.
Accounted For.
Mrs. J.’s patience was much tried by
a servant who had the habit of stand
ing around with her mouth open. One
day as the maid waited upon the ta
ble her mouth was open, as usual, and
her mistress said:
“Mary, your mouth is open.”
“Yassum,” replied Mary; “I opened
it.”—Philadelphia Ledger.
A Long Story.
Ascum—Say, old man, what did your
wife say to you when you got in last
night?
Wrounds—Oh, are you just starting
on your two weeks’ vacation?
Ascum —N’o. Why?
Wrounds—Then you won’t have time
to listen. I can’t talk as fast as she
did.—Houston Post
Why She Asked.
“Hare you ever kissed a girl be
fore V” she asked.
“Why do you put that question to
me?” he replied.
“I only wished to know whether it
was lack of experience or natural awk
wardness that made you go about it in
such a ridiculous way.”—Chicago Rec
ord-Herald.
The Best Pills Ever Sold.
“After doctoring 15 years for
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. Ayscue, of Ingleside,
N. C. Sold under guarantee at
(i. VV. DeLaperriere’s drug store.
25c.
After a woman has her own way
she is apt to get mad because her
husband didn’t interfere. . .
NOBODY SPARED
Kidney Troubles Attack Winder Men
and Women, Old and Young.
Kidney ills seize young and old.
' Gome quickly with little warn
ing.
Children sutTer in their early
years—
Can’t control the kidnev secre
tion .
Girls are languid, nervous, suf
fer pain.
Women worry, can’t do daily
work.
Men have lame and aching backs.
The cure for man, woman, and
child.
Is to cure the cause —the kid
neys.
Doun's Kidney Pills cure sick
kidneys—
Cure all forms of kidney suf
fering. Winder testimony proves
it.
J. A. Patat, Athens St.,Winder,
Ga., says: “Ourdaughter suffered
for some time from pain in her
back and hips and was also sub
ject to terrible headaches. She
seemed to be languid and tired
most of the time and though wo
did everything for her, she grew
no better. Finally we had Doan’s,
Kidney Pills brought, to our atten
tion and getting a box at Turner’s
Pharmacy, we b Q gan giving they
to her. In less than a week she
began to improve and from them
on she rapidly grew better unti
entirelv tree from the above menl
tioned annoyances. She is now
well and strong and we are sure
that Doan’s Kidney Pills should
be given the credit for benefiting
her.”
For sale by 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,
What Happened to Kansas.
A short fat man, with a curving
brimmed straw hat, a milk bene
volent eve, and a double chin, walk
ed up and down the lobby of the
Annex. He did not look exactly
like a statesman, tbo characterized
by {i distinctive manner, and he
scarcely seemed a politician.
“Who can that be?” asked an
interested looker-on. “He doesn’t
seem to be button-holing anyone,
and looks almost a stranger in a
strange land.”
“Why that,” responded a friend,
“is William Allen White-”
“Oh." said the other with signs
of enlightenment in his countenance.
“lie’s what happened to Kan
sas.” —Chicago Post.
Stumped.
A little four-year-okl was sitting
beside his mother’s young lady
guest. He was silent for pehaps a
whole minute, and then asked her,
‘.‘Say, what would 1 be (what na
tionality) if 1 was lx>rn on the
ocean?”
“Whatever your mother and fa
ther were, dear,” was the reply
“But,” and bis big blue eyes
widened with intenseness, “sup
posing’ 1 was cornin’ across with my
auntie?”
And that young lady didn’t know
the answer.
Our Clubbing Offer
Watson s Weekly Jeffersonian and
Winder Weekly News, one year,
$1.50
Atlanta Georgian and Winder Week
ly News, one year,
$4.50
Atlanta Tri-Weekly Constitution
and Winder Weekly News, one year,
$1.50
Atlanta Semi-Weekly Journal and
Winder Weekly News, one year,
$1.25
Watson’s Magazine and Winder
Weekly News, one year,
2.00