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PROFESSIONAL CARDS
' LEWIS C. RUSSELL.
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Winder, Ga.
lljßces over B'irst National Rank.
G. A. JOHNS,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
Winder, Ga.
Office over Smith & Carithers’
Rank Practice in State arid U.
S. Courts.
J. F. HOLMES,
ATTORNEY-AT-LA W,
Statham, (ia.
Criminal and Commercial Law a
(jLialtv.
W. 11. QUART HUMAN
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Winder, Ga.
* Practice in all the courts
Commercial law a specialty.
W. L. DkLaPERRIERK
DENTAL SURGERY.
Winder - - Georgia
Fillings, Bridge and Plate-work
done in rrost scientific and satis
factory way.
Offices on Broad St.
Burgeon williams
DENTIST,
Winder - Georgia
Offices over Smith & Carithers
baujk. 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, <3 A.
(■Office over Turner’s Pharmacy.
Residence on Broad St. ’Phone
1'1<). Attend all calls day or night
DU R. P. ADAMS,
BETHLEHEM, GA.
General-Practice. Telephone.
Office Hours—7 to 0n m ; 7 to
£> f m.
ALLEN’S ART STUDIO.
All kinds of Photographs made
by latest methods. All work an d
promptly. Office on Candler St.,
Winder Ga.
► CHILDREN
—AT THE—
“Awkward Age?'
■ in ■in
STILL WE CAN MAKE
PRETTY GOOD . . .
Photographs
\ ' of them. And you know
' you’d like to have the pie
v tures to send away, and
some to kpep for yourself-
Bring the children in, and let us
show you what we can do-
ALLEN ART STUDIO
WINDER, GA.
For Sale
—One of the Neatest —
5-Room Cottages in
Winder .
Close in and convenient to all
churches and school. A bargain
for next two weeks.
LAMAR PERRY
Administrator’s Sale
Georgia, Jackson County. By virtue
of an order from the Court of u. Jinary
of said county, will be sold before ihe
court house door in said count>, within
the legal hours of sale, on the first
Tuesday in November, 1909, the follow
ing real estate, towit:
Said property situated in Jackson
county, part of it in the town of
Hoschton, Ga.
Plat No. 1 shows three tracts. Ist,
the John R. Hosch dwelling house, of
six rooms, a good three-room tenant
house, and barn, wood and smoke
houses, with five-acre lot, with pasture
and water, and frontson Railroad Ave..
in Hoschton, an excellent home.
2nd, a tract of twenty-two and one
half acres, adjoining the above tract,
good four-room house, barn, smoke
house, fine oak forest and pasture, a
complete home and small farm com
bined, where A. C. Hosch now resides.
3rd, a tract cf eighteen acres, ad
joining the above tract, fine, strong
red land, which will be offered for sale
with the John R. Hosch home lot, first
mentioned above.
Plat No. 2. Shows Lot No. 1, of the
Blalock farm. Beginning at a beech
on branch where Hoschton and Jeffer
son road crosses branch, thence 532
3-4 W 13 10 chs to stake corner, thence
S 311-4 E 18. 90 chs to poplar, thence N
<)4 E 10 27 chs to beech on branch, thence
up the meanders of the branch to water
oak stupip, thence N .40 3-4 E 1.93 chs
to maple, thence N 48 1-4 W 4-88 chs to
beech the beginning corner, containing
2G 1-2 acres.
Plat No. 3, shows Lot No. 2, of the
Blalock farm. Beginning on Jefferson
and Hoschton l'oad, corner with Lot
No. 1, thence S 323-1 W 8.81 chs to
rock, thence N 26 W 1.43 chs to stake,
thence 572 3-4 W 1.67 chs to stake
corner with Bishop Smith, thence S 23
E 16.55 chs with Smith to pine knot
corner, thence N 64 E 12 13 chs with
Hill Brothers, to poplar on branch,
thence x 31 1-4 WlB 90 chs to stake,
beginning corner, containing twenty
acres.
Plat No. 4, known as the Shoal tract
on Mulberry river. Beginning at Mat
hews bridge, thence N 311-2 W 18.94 chs
to an iron stake, thence N 30 E 8.33 chs
to red oak, thence N 07 1-4 E 12.50 chs
to rock on the branch, thence down
branch to the river, and along river to
a cotton wood tree, with water right
privilege of two chs length along said
"branch, thence S 62 1-4 W 20.50 chs
with Mathews land to the bridge, the
beginning point, containing forty-four
and one-half acres. This tract is in the
woods and embraces a fine shoal and
water power on the river.
Plat No. 5, known as the old Hosch
home place, a mile and a half from
Hoschton. Beginning at a rock on
Hoschtoh and Winder road, thence E
3.12 chs to post oak, thence N 67 E 207
chs to iron stake, thence 532 3-4 E 25.00
chs to stake, thence S2B 1-2 E 10.27 chs
to iron stake, thence S 33 E 7.91 chs to
iron stake corner with Hill Bros.,thence
546 1-2 W 27.12 chs to iron stake cor
ner with Hill Bros , thence N 3> W 14.
00 chs to ir6n stake in Winder and
Hoschton road, thence northerly along
said road to the begining comer, con
taining 76 acres. On the lot is a large
2-story 9-room dwelling and out-houses;
also, one good 4-room tenant house, two
good springs, fine pasture and lot of
fresh cleared land; a fine farm.
Plat No. 6, knowm as Lot No. 2, of
the old home place, adjoins the fore
going tract. Beginning on an iron
stake on Winder and Hoschton road,
thence 532 1-2 W 12 67 chs to an iron
stake, thence N 80 1-2 W 2.29 chs to
iron stake, thence S 10 1-4 E 6 19,thence
S 3 1-2 E 2.56 chs to iron stake in road,
thence S 70 W 32 96 chs to rock corner
thance N 33-4 E 19.78 chs to rock,
thence N 73 3-4 E 30.58 chs to rock,
thence N 18 i-4 E 4.78 chs to rock,
thence N65 i-2 E 5.25 chs to red oak,
thence 522 1-2 E 5.73 chs along public
road 1-0 iron stake, the beginning cor
ner, containing 61 acres of good farm
land. „. „
Plat No. 7, known as the River Bot
om 'tract. Beginning at an iron stake,
in Hoschton and Winder road, thence S
35 E 1 4.00 chs to an iron stake, thence
546 1-2 W 0.38 chs to an iron stake in
stump, thence S 31 1-2 W 20 38 to a
sweet gum on river, thence S 65 W 5.00
chs along river to public road bridge,
thence northerly along said public road
4i.40 chs to the beginning iron stake
corner, containing twenty-three acres,
fine, high bottom land, making regu
lar crops of corn, very seldom over
flowed. .
Be all the measurements of said tracts
more or less, as surveyed and platted
by C. O. Pittman, county surveyor, and
George Appleby, in Aug and Sept.,
1 909. All of said plats are in the hands
of A. C. Hosch, adnvr., Hoschton, (.a.,
who will exhibit same and the land to
prospective buyers. Terms, one-half
cash, and half in thirty days from saie.
Sold for the purpose of distribution,
and the payment of debts. This 4th
day of Oct. i9C9. A. C. Hoscn and
Mrs. Beatrice Hosch.
Admr’s. Estate of John P. Hosch.
——-IN—
AUTOMOBILES
Ail classes —rich and poor, young and
old —are becoming more or less inter
ested. In view of this fact . . . .
Are now preparing to build anew Garage, 90x100 feet, and
have secured the Maxwell, Studebaker, “E. M. F.” and Flan
ders agencies in Northeast Georgia, and the 4 ’Black Crow”
for the State. Winder must not lag behind. We promise
her citizens that we will sell more Automobiles from Winder
than any town, of the same size, in the State.
* ‘Maxwell Wins ’ ’
Again and again. They recently won the '‘Reliability” run
from Washington to Boston and return. They finished first and
second in class “D” of this year's “Glidden Tour.” The Max
well is the only car ever driven by a woman across the Conti
nent, 3,000 miles, from New York to San Francisco.
The Maxwell record of 10.000 miles over country roads with
out stopping its engine is still 6,000 miles ahead of its nearest
competitor.
On the famous hill, ‘‘Giant’s Despair,” at Wilkes-Barre,
Pa., the Maxwell recently defeated every car in its class. At
Sunset Hill, Ossining, N. Y, the new 1910 model “Q” defeated
the entire field of eleven American cars, three of which were of
the six-cylinder type, costing $3,000 and over.
Maxwell does not get reliability at the expense of speed.
They do not build racing cars, but they do win in hill climbs
and endurance runs.
The Maxwell people have entered four cars in the Herald-
Journal endurance race. Have you noticed how few factories
have done the same thing ?
Studebaker “E. M. F.” and
“Flanders. ”
This car has no equal at the price. Just ask anybody which
is the quietest, smoothest running car they know of, and they
must and wili unhesitatingly reply, “E. M. F.” We believe
this cat- to be as near perfect as can be made. Everyone who
rides in an “E. M. F.” says it is the smoothest thing they have
seen. One of the most prominent men in town remarked the
other day that he could sit on his veranda with his back to the
street and tell an “E. M. F.” because they were by far the
smoothest and most noiseless cars in town. How many others
can say the same.
ALL ABOARD! TICKLE THE CARBURETTA AND TOUCH
THE BUTTON. OFP EGO TO SELL
100 AUTOMOBILES 100
in the next twelve months. This is our determination.
See h *w far we miss it. . . .....
F fan & Flanigan.
p $ j* tor mv automobile information. Good territory
to let to ttu. rLb ;;uriles .ho can eU automobile*. We have just re
ceived 25 ’ & * jir.es. aU sdZ’-’s. Write or telephone us. Prices guaran
te< and. ’ F - &F -