Winder weekly news. (Winder, Jackson County, Ga.) 18??-1909, July 02, 1908, Image 3

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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. in., 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. m. Claud Mavne, Superintendent. Prayer meeting every Thursday evening at usual hour. Baptist Church, Rev. R. D. DeeWeese, Pastor. Preacn every 2nd and 4th Sunday at 11:30 a. m. and Bp. m.. Sunday School 10:30a. in. W. L. Blassingatne, Superintendent. Prayer meeting ever}' Wednesday even ing at usual hour. Presbyterian Church. Services on the Ist and 3d Sundays ar II a. ni. and at 8:30 p. in. Rev. Fritz Rauschenburg, pastor. Sunday school eAery Sunday at 10:30 a. in. V\. H. Quarterman, Superin Undent. Holiness Church. Preaching second Sunday at 11 a. •m. and 7:30 p. in. 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. Fv erybody invited. Russell No. 99, K. of P. F. W. Bondurant, C. C.; J. H. Turner V. C ; B. A. Juhan, Prelate; F E Durst, K of R and Sand M of F; J E Callahan, M of W; H E Milli Kin, M A; H P Stan ton, I G; E C McDonald, O G Winder Lodge No. 81,1. 0. 0. F. S T Maughon, N S; T ECall than, V G; N R Lord R S; R L Griffetli, F S; W J Smith, Treas Navajo Tribe No. 42, I. 0. R. M. Meets every 2nd and 4th Monday nights R L Griffith, Sachem; J C Pentecost Sr Sagamore; C H Cook, Jr Sagamore E A Starr, G of R; Camp Joseph E. Johnson U. C. V Meets every 3rd Saturday evening at 3 p. in., 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. PROFESSIONAL CARDS ' J. F. HOLM US, ATT( )K X B Y-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. ., i -1 - ... .. ________ ALLEN’S ART STUDIO. All kinds of Photographs made bv latest methods. All work done promptly. Office on Candler St., Winder Ga. • "iciuLTH^coiicTri AND CURE the LUNCSj with Dr. King’s 1 New Discovery FOR Colds HS JS&Ku AND ALL THROAT AND LUNG TROUBLES. GUARANTEED SATISFACTORY ' OB MONEY REFUNDED. Elrod & Barron, WINDER, GA. We have withdrawn from the Granite Hotel and opened up a first-class barber shop in the Can non building on JACKSON STREET First class material and best of sendee. Your patronage solicited. elrod & mm. Proprietors. Winder Train Schedules Arrival and Departure of Trains Eastern Time. Taking effect- Sunday Jan. f>, OS. Eastern Time is 38 minutes fas ter than Sun Time. SEABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY. EASTWARD. No. 52, - - 10:03 am No. 32, - - 2:50 p m No. 38, - - 10:85 pm Westward. No. 41, - - 5:29 a m No. 33, - - 3:50 pm No. 58, 7:43 p m Above schedules are shown as infor mation, and are not guaranteed.” Gainesville Midland Railway SOUTH BOUND No. 11 —Lv 8:40 a. m. No. 13 —Lv. 1:15 p. m No. 15 —Lv. 10:35 a 111: Sunday only. NORTH BOUND No. 12 —At. 12:00 m. No. 14 —Ar. :505 p m. No. 10 —A-. 5:23 p m; Sun.onlv. No. 12 will run to Winder re gardless of No. 13. Yard limits at Winder are ex tended “south” to Seaboard Air Line junction- All trains going through Winder yard nuist be under full control. NOBODY SPARED Kidney Troubles Attack Winder Men and Women, Old and Young. Kidney ills seize young and old. Come quickly with little warn ing. Children suffer in their early years— Can’t control the kidnev secre tios. Girls are languid, nervous, suf fer pain. Women worry, can’t d<> daily work. Men have lame and aching backs. The cure for man, woman, and | child. Is to cure the cause —the ki<l- I ne >' s ‘ Doan’s Kidney Pills cure sick j kidneys— Cure all forms of kidney suf | fering. Winder testimony proves j it. J. A. Patat, Athens St.,Winder, |Ga., says: “Ourdaughter suffered j for some time from pain in her ! back and hips and was also sub ject to terrible headaches. She I seemed to be languid and tired i most of the time and though we I did everything for her, she grew no better. Finally we had Doan’s, Kidney Pills brought toour atten ! tion and getting a box at Turner's Pharmacy, we began giving they to her. In less than a week she ' began to improve and from them !on she rapidly grew better unti ; entirely free from the above menl Jtionod annoyances. She is now well and strong and we are sure that Doan’s Kidney Pills should I he 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. < iwmMU Shot His Wan and Then Leisurely Proceeded to Sip a Cocktail. “When I went to Tombstone. Ariz.. in 1880 to practice law, there were many desperate characters in that community." said Hon. Marcus A Smith, who has been delegate in con gress from that territory for the big gest part of the past twenty-two years. “At one time I could have men tioned by name no fewer than thirty five men who stood in the front rank of ‘killers.’ With one exception. I be lieve there was not one of the entire crowd who did not die with his boots on, slain by a bullet from a Colt navy six or a Winchester, in the same fash lon he had himself meted out death to many of his fellows. “It was the inexorable hand of fate that these semieivilized beings should get their quietus by violence. Yet some of them were as gentle in their ways as the veriest dude who strolls mincingly along Pennsylvania avenue and apparently as harmless. I recall a fair skinned, blue eyed young fellow all your killers have blue eyes—named Harry Leslie. He was a Georgia boy aud evidently the child of decent, well bred people. “One day while in the act of takiug a drink in a saloon in Tombstone some one whispered in his ear that an ene my was waiting just outside with a Winchester and swearing to kill him the moment he emerged from the bar room. Putting down his untouched liquor, Leslie walked to the door, whipped out his revolver and sent a bullet crashing into the brain of the intending murderer, who never even got his rifle presented. It was the most quickly acted drama 1 ever saw. As soon as he watched his man fall prone to the earth Leslie walked back as cool as if it were the most trifling detail of life and leisurely sipped his cocktail. “I was his lawyer when he was put to trial for his life, and the Jury ac quitted him after being out only a few minutes.”—Baltimore American. Too Big For the Booth. Diners in a Broadway restaurant the other night were amused when a young lady wearing an enormous white straw hat trimmed with flaring red wings walked ir> to the telephone booth in the corner and started to en ter. She evidently had forgotten she was wearing her “Merry Widow,” for she fetched up against the sides of the door with a bang, her hat failing to clear the opening by a good three I inches on either side. However, the young lady was equal to the emergen cy. She calmly grasped the brim of her hat with both hands, tilted it to one side and glided through the door 1 like a sailboat going through a draw-| bridge. Up to this time there had been smiles ami grins, but when the young lady tried to draw the door to and found that it would not shut at all with her hat inside the room broke into a roar of lnughter that shook up even the most imperturbable waiter.— New York Press. Fought Under Six Flags. A remarkable soldier has just died at Budapest in the person of Generali Stephen Turr, one of the bravest revo- j lutionary generals that ever lived. He commenced his military career as a lieutenant in the Austrian army. Then he fought for the Hungarian revolu tionary government, helped to quell a German revolution and joined Gari baldi in his great struggle. On the outbreak of the Crimean war he served as a voluuteer in Omar Pasha’s army against Russia and finally received a commission in the British transport j service. It was while buying horses for the British army at Budapest in 1855 that the general was seized by the Austrians as a deserter and sen tenced to death. But both the British j and French governments made such emphatic protests against this seuteuee I that it was commuted to banishment. Finally the old soldier settled down in ! Paris. Memphis on the Nile. Memphis ou the Nile, one of the greatest capitals of the ancient world, is buried beneath the ground which is now under cultivation by the villagers | of Mitrnhineh. who will have to be transferred to other plots and compen sated before the contemplated work of excavation can proceed very far. It is estimated that an expenditure of about $15,000 annually for fifteen years will be required to excavate tbe temple sites, apart from the city. The un- j earthing of Memphis, which contained the finest school of Egyptian art, will be by far the greatest archaetogical * work of recent times and must result In a vast addition to the world’s knowl edge of ancient Egyptian history and civilization. The work will soon be begun by Professor Petrie, head of the British School of Archaeology in! Egypt, The little a man wants here below he usually wants alxtve the ordinary. None hut the brave deserve the fair for it takes a hero to pay their bills. mivsiu.ni I DHBTUJW: It Was Only a Villags Compared With Modern London. Another historical lie lias been nailed to the counter by the German Oriental society, which has been engaged re cently in uncovering the ruins of an cient Babylon. In its report, just published, it states that practically the wh de area of the city has now been laid bare and the foundations of the inclosing wall traced throughout its entire length. The space occupied by the city was barely one square mile as compared with London's seventy, ami the build ings were plain, unpretentious struc- j tures of sun dried bricks. The famous wall was about thirty feet high by four miles long and was pierced by four gates. Herodotus made this same wall fifty miles long aud a hundred feet high. | with 100 gates. But then these oiu historians were prone to exaggeration. ; They gave the world to understand, j for instance, that the Colossus of Rhodes bestrode the harbor \iih its feet so wide apart that au hour’s hard rowing was necessary in order to pass j from one to the other. Asa matter of ; fact, the statue was not a striding one, ! and its height was 120 feet only as compared with the 150 feet of the statue of Liberty which dominates I New York harbor. And as it is with this, so It is with most of the other wonders of the an- ; cfent world. Pompey’s pillar, for ex- i ample, would be dwarfed if placed j alongside the Nelson column. The Al- | bert memorial, erected in Hyde park by Queen Victoria in memory of the prince consort, is larger and more splendid than the temple tomb built by Queen Artemisia at Halicarnassus in houor of her husband, Mausolus. A score of Ninevehs could be contained within the area of modern Loudon, while the palace of Cyrus, which we were gravely assured was cemented j with gold, was quite an ordinary edi- | flee by comparison with, say, the new j war office in Parliament street. —Pear- j son’s Weekly. Cosmopolitan New York. Just think of it! New York is the first Irish city of the world. Belfast, i the biggest city in Ireland, has a pop ulation of only 400.000, while this city has an Irish population of nearly 000,- ; 000. It is, moreover, the real metropo lis of the Jewish race, since it has a 1 population of 725,000. Warsaw has not quite 200,000. As for Germans, it is the third German city of the world, with nearly 700,000 native German in habitants. Berlin and Hamburg alone exceeding her in this respect New York Is, further, the second Austrian city in the world, the fifth Swedish, the sixtli Norwegian, the sev enth Italian and the eighth Russian city in the universe.—New York World- Village Income From Golf. The village of Brancaster has made an arrangement with the Royal West Norfolk Golf club under which it re ceives 4 per cent of the club’s gross income, with a guarantee of not less than $250 in any year, for the use of the land which has been converted into links. Each year the money is distributed equally among household- ; ers of not less than twelve months’ residence. This year’s distribution has Just been made, and the club paid over; $315, au increase of $42 upon last year’s contribution. The amount suf ficed to give every householder in Brancaster $1.25 and leave a balance In hand.—London Standard. Electric Campaign Cane. An electric campaign cane is being manufactured as one of the novelties of the approaching presidential cam paign. The handle of the cane is modeled to represent the bead of the candidate in whose interests the cane is being carried. Inside the head, which Ls of glass, is a small electric bulb, which lights it up at night in an effective manner. Instead of being j fastened directly to the upper end of the cade, the illuminated head Is con nected with it by a leather sleeve or neck and bobs back and forth with the swing of carrying it. The battery is placed within this sleeve.—Popular Mechanics. The Cocked Hat. Of course there is no reason why Mr. (or, rather, Viscount) Morley should not wear a cocked hat, but there is hardly any man whom the mind has greater difficulty in associat ing with that type of head covering and scarcely any type of head cover ing that would seem less befitting for that austere and philosophic brow. The greater the natural dignity of the wearer the more ridiculous it makes him look. Any scheme for the reform of the house of lords ought to provide for its abolition.—Manchester Courier. None but the brave deserve the fair, for it takes a hero to pay their bills. During the term of her engage ment a girl thinks life is a con tinuous matinee HUH WUMAN WAS Ml. The poor Hindu was sadly put to it to account for woman, lovely wo man, but no more so than many wiser ones since his time. Accord ing to the legend Twashtri, the Vulcan of Hindu mythology, created the world, but when he arrived at the final object which was to be his chel d'oeuvre he found to his an noyance that he had run out of materials. He had not a single chunk f<> solid matter left. With a mental execration upon his carelessness lu* fell into a pro found meditation, the result of which was that he took “the round ness of the moon, the undulating curves of the serpent, the graceful twist of the creeping plant, the light shivering of the grass "Made and the slenderness of the willow, the light ness of the feather, the gentle gaze of the doe, the frolicsomeness of the sunbeam, the tears of the cloud, the inconstancy of the wind, the timidity of the Imre, the vanity of the pea cock, the hardness of the diamond, the cruelty of the tiger, the heatjof the fire, the chill of the snow, the erakling of the parrot and the cooing of the turtledove.” He mixed these together in equal proportions, anti the result was wo man. After all, isn’t this an ad vance upon the rib theory? —Kansas City Journal. £ It Can’t Be Beat. The best of all teachers is ex perience. C. M. Harden, of Hilver City, North Carolina, says: “[ find Electric Bitters does all that’s clamed for it. For Stomach, Liver and Kidney troubles it can’t be beat. I have tried it and find it. a most excellent medcine.’' Mr. Harden is right fit’s the best of all medicines also for weakness, lame hack, and all run down con ditions. Best too for chibs and malaria. Sold under guarantee at G. W. DeLaperriere’s drug store. 50c. Georgia Watermelon. Fresh from the fields of Georgia came 80,000 watermelons on Sat urday to gladden the hearts of men, to make them forget politics, dis miss from mind Harry Thaw and the tribulations of Mr. Hughes. They,come smilingly, joyously, inimitably into what for almost eight months has been an arid desert. The juice of the Georgia melon has the flavor of wild honey, of the iig, the pineapple, the orange, the tangerine and the pomegranate all mixed and woven into a very poem of ecstasy of delight. Its aroma intoxicates the senses. With t,he heart of one held to the mouth there is the combined perfume of the rose and the lily, the violet and the hyacinth, the fresh field wherein daisies grow wild, the spice groves of India and the jessa mine and magnolia valleys of Loui siana. Soft suns have kissed their vines, dews have mellowed them, dancing moonbeams have caressed them, and now New York will sit in the summer’s shade and bless the sea sons that produced them. Ah, what a time we all will have for the next thee months! —John Temple Graves, in New York American. Best The World Affords. t “It gives me unbounded pleasure to recommend Buck lea’s Arnica Salve,” says J. W. Jenkins, of Chapel Hill, N. C. “1 am con vinced it’s the best salve the world affords. It cured a felon on my thumb, and it never fails to heal every sore, burn or wound to which it is applied. 25c. at G. W. DeLa perriere’s drug store. Anyway, a man ins’t in a posi tion to get stuck up over the taffy in his obituary.