Winder weekly news. (Winder, Jackson County, Ga.) 18??-1909, September 09, 1909, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

CITY PRESSING CLUB In Basement of H. J. GARRISON Building. Pressing, cleaning and dyeing. Altering a spe cialty. First-class work, prompt attention. Phone 180. ALONZO HINTON, Proprietor. INTELLIGENT SERVICE POLITE TREATMENT. GOVERNMENT SUPERVISION Strong Board of Directors that direct Stock holders worth over a million dollars. YOUR PATRONAGE SOLICITED. Your business will be appreciated. The First National Bank of Winder Capital Stock Paid in $50,000.00. A FAR SIGHTED MAN, Knowing the uncertainties of the future and realizing the responsibilities of life, does not let the fire which may consume his property find him without Insurance. Furthermore, lie pro tects his estate and those dependent on him by insuring his own life. For reliable Insurance, life and fire, see KILGORE & RADFORD, Insurancec Agents, BfirOffice at The Winder Banking Company. HOUSLS AND LOTS FOR SALL. If you do not want to buy one you had better not come this way, for I have them from a 3-room to a 7-room house for sale so cheap that you would think that they were almost given to you. I also have many desirable vacant lots to se lect from. We mean business. For further information, see R. J. HUFF, AT RUSSE.LL, WINDELR, GfLORGIA. The New Policies Of THE FIDELITY MUTUAL LITE INSURANCE COMPANY. PHILADELPHIA, PA. Are the moat up-to-date and com prehensive Life Insurance Poli cies of the day. Thirty days grace in paying premiums. Most advanced non-forfeiture features. Highest values, highest divi dends, lowest premiums. For further information apply to F. W. BONDURANT, Manager. Also Agent for Fire, Accident Causualty and Bond Insurance. Best Companies, best rates, best terms and prompt and careful attention given to all business placed with the agency. No restrictions as to residence, travel, occupation. Total and permanent disability at once secures you your Policy fully pa id up with no further premiums to pay. But instead of premiums being due, you re ceive an annual payment from the I Company during such disability. GOOD WORK. Done Daily in Winder. Many Citizens Tti! of It. Nearly every reader has heard of Doan’s Kidney Pills. Their good work in Winder still con tinues, and our citizens are con stantly adding endorsement by public testimony. No better proof of merit can be had than tht‘ experience of iriends and neghbors. Rettd this case. A. P. Copland, marshal, Win der, Ga., says: ‘‘l am glad to endorse Doan's Kidney Pills as 1 used them with the best of r suits. I had been suffering from an attack of kidney trouble for some time and could get no relief. Having Do ill’s Kidney Pills brought to my attention, I pro cured a supply at Turner’s Phar macy and soon after using them, i my condition began to improve. : In a short time I was rid of every sign of kidney trouble and have j not been bothered by it since.” For sale by all dealers. Price I 50 cents. Foster-Millmrn Cos., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remcmh r the name —Doan’s — . and take no other. HOW TO BEGIN THE DAY. Rise with the lark, but not for ; one. Re very careful to attire your-; self neatly; our lives, like our sal- i ads, are always betor for a good dVessing. Shave unmistakably be fore you descend from your room; chins, like oysters, should have their beards taken off before they are permitted to go down- Start with determination to be agreeable and good tempered, and like an overwhelming fire, nothing will put y,.u out. Should the tea not be hot, tike it cooley; should the ham not be salt, emulate the philosophic Bacon, and haying made a few ob ■ servations about the milk of human kindness, the sugar of domestic fe licity, the cup of happiness being full, the butter resembling an actor in a fresh part, because it appears in anew roll, conclude with the appropriate ballard of Let the toast pass,’’ cracking fresh eggs and stale jokes simultaneously. —Clarke County Courier. The Kurfees Paint W V I I THE KURFEES PAINT PURE WHITS LEAD PtIRS OXIDE or ZIBTO ■AOS OHLT PURS LINBKKD OIL OP PURS DRTER PURE COLORS .AMD NOTHING ELSE Said fnbjwit to chomieol onolpau It’s really a pleasure to sell the Kurfees PURE LEAD and ZINC PAINT. We don’t have to make any excuses for any cheap adultera tions. It’s all pure goods and the exact formula, the chemical analysis, is plainly shown right on the can. You can see just what you are buy ing. We guarantee every gallon. Call and let us show you the latest and most up-to-date line of colors. WOODRUFF HARDWARE & MANUFACTURING CO. Winder, Ga. If Horace Greeley were living to day bis advice would be: Go south, young man, go south.” — Augusta Herald. No; he would !>e living in the south himself, and his advice would be,“Come south,young man, come south.” —Andeason Daily Mail. Agricultural Exhibition. To Be Held In Jefferson Saturday. October 16th. Mr R. L. Rogers, Winder, Ha., offers as a premium a high-grade Rock Ilill buggy for the five stalks of cotton bearing the most number of bolls, grown in Jackson county, in the Agricultural Exhibition which is to bo held in Jefferson Saturday, October 10. This buggy has been shipped and can now be seen at Mr. Rogers' new warehouse at Winder. List of premiums: One 1-horse White Hickory wagon for the heaviest 25 ears of corn grown on bottom land. One Walker Cultivator, tor the second heaviest 2-> cars of corn grown oil bottom land. One 2-horse Hackney Wagon, for the heaviest 25 ears of corn grown on up land. One 2-horse Disc Plow, for the second heaviest 25 ears of corn grown on lip-land. One Disc Blow for the live stalks bearing the most number of bolls; One 2-horse Turn Blow for the second five stalks of cotton bearing the most number of bolls. One Walker 2 horse Blow stock for the heaviest pumpkin. One Walker Middle-buster, for the heaviest apple. One Walker Spring Tooth-Har row for ear of corn having on the cob the gieatrst number of rows of corn. 55.0!) m Cold, offered by 1 bomas M. Bell, Oainesville, Oa., for the heavit st ear of Corn. Tin* above ten premiums are to be contested for in the following counties only: Cwinnett.llall, Jack son, Forsyth, Milton, Cherokee, Banks, Habersham and Stephens. One White Star Buggy, for the heaviest individual ear of corn grown in the Ninth 1 )istrict One High Grade Steel Walking Plow for the heaviest Yam potato grown in the Ninth District; One Buchanan Disc Plow, for the heaviest Irish potato grown in the Ninth District- One Rock llill Buggy, for the five stalks of cotton hearing the most number of bolls grown in Jackson county. The premiums on products grown in and restricted to Jackson county will be published within a short while. . Officers Jackson County [ xhibition. Below we publish a list of the officers and directors of the Jack : son county division of the North east Georgia Cotton and Corn exhi bition to occur in the fall: Geo. W. Bailey, Pres., Jefferson J. ('. Head, V. Pres., Pendergrass Jen* S. Ayers, Secy , Jefferson J. ('. Turner, Tresis-, Jefferson 1)1 k kctors : T. T. Cooper, Braselton J. S- Pinson, Jefferson H. C. Barnett, Jefferson J. M . R.ss, Winder C. J. Hood, Commerce C. F. Holliday, Jefferson D. P- Mathews, Center B. A. Smith, Maysville. Bottling Plant For Sale. Will sell bottling plant with good trade established. Located at Hoschtou, Ga. Will sell on terms that yon can make plant pay for itself. Best of reasons for selling. H. J. RANDOLPH, Hoschton, Ga. With Our Exchanges. A Nebraska woman claims to he Orville Wright’s wife, and the Macon News suggests that it is time for Orville to ily.—Athens Banner. They won’t call him “Little Joe” much longer if he continues to show such baekbone as he displayed in tin* Mitchell case. —Augusta Chronicle. The Mary Janes may look all right on Mary Jane in the cartoons, hut hanged if they look good to us out parading around —Dalton Citizen. North Pole, F. S. A.! “Old (Jlory” has been unfurled there, and it will he a cold day for the in vader that tries to haul it down. Kansas City Journal. It is now in order for some en terprising daily t > print a picture of the north pole, just as it looked when Dr. (look discovered it. — Rome Tribune Herald. Says John W. Cates “prosperity is ahead of us.” If we only had the price of a Hying machine, we should certainly make a desperate effort to ! overtake that elusive thing, called prosperity. —Elborton Star. At Albany the other night a young man was shot at with a sup posed blank cartridge while being initiated into the mysteries of the Elks, hut the blank proved to be loaded and the candidate was wounded. We don t care about joining tlm Elks- —Dahlonega Nug | get. Tom Watson is having as hard a time maintaining his authorship of the rural mail delivery as Major Fontaine is the authorship of “All : Quiet Along the Potomac Tonight. ’ ’ We believe each is entitled to the credit others seek to take from them. —Dublin Courer Dispatch. Atlanta has produced a man who has met Dr. Cook, who discovered j the north pole. There are hundreds in Dublin who have met the gentle man, he having visited this city in 1002. Groat is Atlanta, hut greater is Dublin. —Dublin Oorurier-Dis patch. You won’t get pellegra from eat ing the products of home-raised c >rn. Another reason why we should raise all we need at home, and let the western corn alone. It is dangerous both to health and prosperity. —Sylvester Telephone. A mother snake was killed in South Carolina a few days ago, and while the death strokes were k*ing administered 72 small snakes made their escape from the old mother snake. And that happened the •lay after the state went dry. All those snakes and no snake bite remedy is enough to give those peo ple nightmare. —Commerce News. The dog tax recently passed by the Georgia legislature is the source of a good deal of sarcasm at the 1 hands of the press of the state. One paper has remarked that “no man who has ever voted for a dog tax went hack to the legislature. It would he a “doggone” good thing for the state at large if some of the mem tiers of the body just adjoined could he kept at home.” % j —Covington News. For Summer Boarders Scott spent a part of one summer in the country, and hence was an authority on agricultural matters. “In milkinga cow,” he wrote his friend, “always sit on the side fur thest from the critter, and nearest the soft spot in the pasture.” A New Jersey judge has ruled that it is just as wicked to say “You look good to me,” as Oh, you kid!” The latest salutation is, “Ah there, Mary Jane!”—Rome Tribue-Heiald.