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NEW IMPROVED DAiN MOWER.
".* . • . r* •. ." * *-' .■' * 7 ' H p- v . .
We handle the best and latest improved Mower on
A- ’ ) .% . \
the market. We sell it at a reasonable price. It is not
made by the sell #© a Mower for $50.00* a
good Rake for $20.00.“' This is a saving of five to nine dol
lars for you.
This machine is guaranteed to - be equal to any ma
chine on the the market. It is equipped with brass bush
ings and in every respect a first-class machine.
We are here to save you five to nine dollars on each
machine, also to keep up competition so that the Trust
will not run the price any higher. Call and see us and ex
amine the machine. Yours for business,
WOODRUFF HARDWARE & MANUFACTURING COMPANY,
WINGER, - GEORGIA.
dust think what it means to
have plenty of Hay.
And think again what it is to
. have the best Mowing
Machine made.
We can sell you either the M Cor
mick or New Dehring Vertical Lift
Mower, with a 26-tcoth self-dump
Rake, and you have the BEST MADE.
Don’t fail to see us before buying.
-SMITH HARDWARE CO..
WINDER, GEORGIA.
I carry in stock everything
that it takes to build a house
and the prices are right.
\v. E. YOUNG,
" The Shingle Man.
I PROFESSIONAL CARDS
LEWIS C. RUSSELL.
■- : ' , ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Winder, Ga.
Offices over First National Bank.
G. A. JOHNS,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
Winder, Ga.
Oflioe over Smith & Gunthers’
Bank. Practice in State and U.
S. Courts.
•J. F. HOLMES,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
Statham, Ga.
Criminal •-■nd Commercial Law a
Specialty.
W. H. QUARTER MAN
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Winder, Ga.
Practice in all the courts
Commercial law a specialty.
W. L. DeLa PER THERE
DENTAL SURGERY.
Winder - - Georgia
Fillings, Bridge and Plate-work
done in most scientific and satis
factory way.
Offices on Broad St.
SPURGEON WILLIAMS
DENTIST,
Winder - - - Georgia
Offices over Smith & Carithers
hank. All work done satisfac
torily,
Phone 81.
DR>S. T. ROSS,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,
Winder, Ga.
Offices over First National Bank.
EDMOND F. SAXON, M. D.
WINDER, GA.
Office over Turner's Pharmacy.
Residence on Broad St. ’Phone
11(5. Attend all calls day or night.
DR. R. P. ADAMS,
BETHLEHEM, GA.
General Practice. Telephone.
ALLEN S ART STUDIO.
All kinds of Photographs made
by latest methods. All work an d
promptly. Office on Candler St.,
Winder Ga
OPPORTUNITY.
They Jo me wrong who say I eomt*
no more
When once 1 knock and fail to
find you in;
For every day I stand outside your
door
And bid you wake, and rise to
fight and win.
Wail not for precious chances past
away,
Weep not for golden ages on the
wane!
%
Each night I burn the records of
the day —
At sunrise every soul is Ikyhi
again!
Laugh like a boy at splendors that
have sped,
To vanished joys be blind and
deaf and dumb; .
My judgments seal the dead past
with i*s dead, . .
But never bind a moment yet to
come.
Tho deep in mire, wring not your
hands and weep:
Blend idy arm to all who say ‘“1
can! ”
No'Shaine-facedo out east ever sank
so deep
’ • #
But yet might rise and be again
a man!
Dost thou behold thy youth all
aghast?
Dost reel from righteous Retribu
tion’s blow?
Then turn from blotted archives of
the past
And find the future’s pages white
as snow.
Art thou a moarner? Rouse thee
from thy spell:
Art thou a sinner? Sins may be
forgiven;
Each morning gives thee wings to
flee from hell,
Each night a star to guide thy
feet to heaven.
—Judge Walter Malone, of Mem
phis, Tenn.
One Point Settled.
Anew family had moved into
the house next door, to the Town
send.-, and little Kitty Townsend,
on the hack porch of her own home,
was cultivating the acquaintance of
the little girl on the opposite porch,
about ten feet away.
“What’s your name?” she asked.
■‘Florence,” answered the new
comer. “What’s yours?”
“Katherine, but they always call I
me Kitty. The name of the old folks
that lived there before you moved
in was Jones.”
“Our name's Thompson.”
“Ours is Townsend. You didn’t
know the Joneses, did you?
<<V 1 )
.No.
“They was awful for borrowing.
They used t< * send oyer to our hous
once or twice every week and bor
row a cupful of coffee for breakfast,
and they never paid it back. You
folks don’t do that, do you?’.’
“No.”^
“She says they don’t, mama!”
called out Kitty, turning her head
and speaking t<> somebody back of
the dining-room window curtain.
—Youth’s Companion.
Just Shopping.
“At least you doctors are not
bothered by shoppers.”
“Aren’t we? Many a woman ha>
gotten my prices on a fashionable
operation that she never intended
to buy.
Her Busy Day.
Higglety-pigglcty., my black ben;
She laid three eggs at half past ten;
She laid another at half past eight,
And then laid off to re-coop-her
eight.
Lippencott’s.
Telling a lie in business’[is inex
cusable; telling it when a young
mother asks if her baby isn’t the
sweetest and prettiest you ever saw,
! is—unavoidable! —Selected.
The Smallest Engine
* Tiny Tini is the name to the
smallest engint in the world. it is
made of gold and steel, and is so
small that a common housefly seems
large in comparison. It weighs
just four grains complete, which is
the weight of an ordinary match.
It takes over 100 such engines to
weigh one ounce, almost 2,000 to
weigh a pound, and more than •
3,000,000 to weigh a ton.
The engine bed and stand are of
gold. The shaft runs in hardened
and ground steel bearings inserted
in the* gold bed. These bearings
are counter-bored from the inside
to form a self-oiling bearing. The
flywheel has a steel center and
arms, with a gold rim, and the
complete wheel weighs one grain.
The. cylinder is of steel, with
octagonal Lise, highly polisher!.
The stroke is 1-32 of an inch; bore,
3,100 of an inch. Seventeen pieces
are used in the construction of this
engine.
The speed of the engine is 6,000
revolutions per minute.. When run
ning 1 (X) per second no motion is
visible to the eye, but it makes a
noise of mosquito. The horsepower
is 1-498,000 of one horsepower.
Compressed air is used to run it,
and it may f>e of interest to note
that the amount required to make
it hum can easily be borne on the
eyeball without winking.
A Girl's Preparedness,
There is something very pitiful
about a girl. She wears calico,
but talks knowingly about tho latest
!styles in silks. Her home is fui
nished plainly, but she knows the
latest styles in furniture; she knows
| how the silverware should be ar
ranged at dinners, the latest stitch
i for the marking of monograms on
: the finest table damask, the eti
quette to be observed at a dinner, a
reception or a ball, although she
| never attended anything more than
a neighborhood party in her life.
Her father’s monthly income is not
as large as the pin money a rich
girl would spend in a day, but she
knows what the rich girl should
wear and buy to be in touch with
the times. She is, in short, pre
pared at any time to marry a rich
man and become a society leader. —
Atchison Globe.
What He Really Wanted.
An absent-minded husband rush
ed into a Curtis Street drugstoie
last night, says Eflie McDowell
Davies in Lippcncott’s, and, slap
ping down a dollar upon the coun
ter, said, “Give me a youthful bot
tle of —1 mean, my blooming wife
wants —er —I ” and, glancing
around at the amused expression
on the bystanders' faces, be bawled
out angrily, “Darn it —I want a
bottle of 111 jothfulyum ; —and wrap
it up quick; Pm in a burry.’’
The weary, yellow-headed clerk
smiled weakly ns he wrapped up a
bottle of “Ever Youthful Bloom”
lotion.
True Eloquence.
The lawyer for the plaintiff had
finished his argument, and the
counsel for the defense stepped for
ward to speak. Trie judge, new to
the bench, and young for his posi
tion, interrupted him. His eyes
were wide open, and tilled with
wonder and admiration for the
eloquent plea of the plaintiff. The
Green Bay tells the story.
“Defendant need not speak,” *he
said. “Plaintiff wins.”
“But, your honor,” said the
attorney for the defendant, “at least
let me present my case.”
“Well, go ahead,” said the judge,
wearily.
The lawyer went ahead. When
he had finished, the judge gaped in
even greater astonishment.
“Don't it beat all!” he ex
claimed. "Now defendant wins!”