The Barrow times. (Winder, Barrow County, Ga.) 19??-1921, January 30, 1919, Image 8

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

hrt.uu ui UJimiiii BaLL. The crack basket ball team of Piedmont College is going t.o play the teeam of the South eastern Christian College at Auburn. (la., next Friday at 1 o'clock in the afternoon. It will Ik* the fastest game that lias been in Auburn in many a day. l*rof. <l. J. Parrish, of An Imrn. is manager of that team ami is looking forward to the game with much interest, ex porting, of course, that they will learn Piedmont a thing or t wo. Good Tires Speed Deliveries No car is better than its tires. And time lost through tire troubles cannot be replaced. Good tires are the best practical guarantee of your car’s continuous and economical service. United States Tires are good tires—the best tires our 76 years of experience in the rubber business have taught us to make. You have your choice of five different types for passenger car or light delivery use— ‘Nobby’, ‘Chain’, ‘Usco\ ‘Plain’, and the famous ‘Royal Cord’. There is also the ‘Nobby Cord’ for heavy duty vehicles, as well as the Solid Truck Tire. Among these good tires you will find exactly the treads best suited to y our car and your driving conditions. Our nearest Sales and Service Depot dealer will gladly point them out to you. United States Tires are Good Tires I Pressing Business I have opened up a complete and thoroughly up-to date Pressing Club in the basement of the Winder National Bank Building. All mv machinery is absolutely new. and I have a first-class Hoffman steam presser. All kinds of Dyeing. Altering, Dry-cleaning, and Pressing done. All work guaranteed. Goods called for and delivered anywhere in side city limits, I solicit your trade. The New Winder Pressing Club PHONE 334 PAUL AUTRY Mgr. Eskimos Play Football. Football In n favoritt* amusement with KKklrnos of all ages. The toot hull la n small round hall made of seal akin and stuffed with reindeer hair. In Labrador, as In Greenland, It Is whipped over the ieo with a thong loop attached to a wooden handle. It can he oaiight In the air and returned with terrific force by means of this instru ment. To Destroy Plant Worms. Worms may b* killed in jars of pot ted plants by taking a dozen horse chestnuts and pouring over them two quarts of hat wnter, writes ... M. T. in the Mother's Magazine. Le‘ stand over night and with this wulei thor oughly saturate the earth in th. Jars. It will not injure the plants, but the worms will be dead in a few hours. Ciasiiieu Ads. Save voUr land. Buy a Mar lin Terrace and Ditching Ma chine from Smith Hardware Cos You get the genuine Certnin teed prepared roofing from Smith Hardware Cos. GALVANIZED R<)OFJNY}. Rest Apjiollo Sheets sold by Smith Hardware Cos. WHITE OAK and KROME Sole leather, only fl.oo per Lb. at Smith Hardware Cos. RIG STOCK of the best Tires and Tubes at Smith Hardwre Cos. Let us fit your car with a new STORAGE BATTERY. We carry them in stock. Smith Hardware Cos. BARGAIN —!) Horse Power OIL ENGINE; s<st us at once. Smith HardwareCo. Best GARDEN FENCE, heavier than ordinary Poultry netting. Sold by Smith Hard ware Cos. NOTICE. .Inst received a car load of High Grade Mules. .1. M. BROOKSIIERE & SONS Winder, Ga. Top of the maket paid for chickens of all kinds —rash or trade. A. S. EBERHART. FOR SALE—Fine Brood Sow. See Lee S. Radford or Clarence Brown. FINE YOUNG COW FOR SALE. If bought at once will sell at an unusual bargin, a young cow that will come in latter part of February. Apply at office of BARROW TIMES. LOST—Bunch of keVst Find er please return to this office. FROM GERMANY. Dec. 18, 1918. Mrs. Georgianne Helton, Winder, Ga. Dear Mother: 1 am writing you a few lines to let you know l am still liv ing and well as usual. 1 guess you had begun to think 1 was dead by not writing before now, but I am still here and hope this will find you all (). K. I want to see you very much, but can’t tell when I will get back home. Hope it will not be long. lam now in Germany in a pretty little city. Ini sure proud the war is over and know you and all at home are. Christmas is getting near and I hope to have a good time, but not like 1 would t home. 1 am looking for a box you are going to send me. Tell all my friends 1 want to see them. Hopin gto hear from you soon, Your son, Bill Helton. DON’T. LET A COLD KEEP YOU AT HOME * Dr. King’s New Discovery almost never fails to bring quick relief Small dose 9 once in awhile and thaft throat-tearing, lung-splitting cough soon quiets down. Another dose and a hot bath before jumping into bed, a good sleep, and back to normal in the morning. Dr. King’s' New * Discover is well known. For fifty years it’s been relieving coughs, colds and bronchial attacks. For fifty years it has been sold by druggists everywhere. A reliable remedy that you yourself or any member of your family ca n take safely. Train Those Stubborn Bowels Help nature take 1 its course, not with a violent, habit-forming purga tive, but with gentle hut certain and natural-laxative, Dr. King’s New Life Pills. Tonic in action, it stimulates the tax bowels. Soldbydruggists everywhere,’ Birds of Nebraska. Although 400 different species of ilrds have their home In Nebraska, It s said that no more than 200 are to ln oqu or. > loonier AWIa n * t n jl/ti HAITI LULALd Edited By MISS LOUISE DANIEL Mr. and Mrs. Murrel, of Mon roe. have moved to Stathain. Mr. Murrell will be assistant cashier in the bank. Miss Stella McElhannon spent Tuesdy in Atlanta. Mrs. Cronic, of Hoschtton, spent Monday with her daugh ter, Miss Mayrell Cronic. Misses Velina Cody, Irene Langford and Roselle Ross spent the past week with Mrs. Ben Smith at Bethlehem. Mr. and Mrs. Chas . Ham mond, of Athens, spent a few days of last week with Mr. and Mrs. B. H. Grant. Mrs. Ward, of Athens, spent severl days with friends and relatives in the city last week. Mr. and Mrs. -Tames Bell, of Winder, spent last Thursday with Mr. and Mrs. Pink Dooly. W. B. Aiken ,of Athens, was in the city on business Satur day. Misses Lowe, Cronic and Ross and Price Harper and Fred Arnold were in Winder Friday evening. Reuben Ward, of Athens, is spending the week with . tives in the city. Mrs. C. S. Williams and Miss Inez Cooper, of Winder, were in Stathain Wednesday. Mrs. Chambers, Mrs. Arnold. Miss Ross and Fred Arnold spent Wednesday in Athens. Miss Daniel spent the week end in Athens with Miss Bish op- Miss Irene Dooly ,of Watkins ville, spent a few days of last week with Miss Lona Dooly. BETHLEHEM LOCALS Mr. E. L. Year-wood has re turned to his work in Atlanta, after a week’s illness. Mrs. Sandy Harrell, of Mon roe ,is visiting at the home of her mother, Mrs. C. T. Math ew's. Mr. W. Pope Harrison spent Saturday night wdth relatives in Statham. Rev. J. W. Brinsfield conduct ed the funeral service of Mr. \V. M. Fite last Friday at Ebenezer church. Among our interesting vis itors is Mrs. Harris, who has spent the past yera with her husband, Captain E. R. Harris, at Post Field, Ft. Sill, Okla., and Love Field, Dallas, Texas. Mr. John 1). Greiner, from Ft. McPherson, recently visited his friends, Misses Ettie Bell and Myitis Harrison. The pupils, faculty and a few friends of the school entertain ed at a box party in the audi torium last. Tuesday evening. We appreciate the efforts of the teachers to improve the class rooms. Miss Joe Kimbell, of Good Hope, spent Friday here en route home from IN inder. Mr. Rozzie Arnold, one of our frequent visitors from Sta.tham, was here last Sunday. Mrs. W. W. Jennings, who is under treatment at Rrawner s Institute, Smyrna, is slowly improving. Mr. Hardy Scott and family have returned to Jefferson. Messrs. Z. N. Hendrix, E. S. Harris, Ed Little and others, transacted business in Winder CJr *Jurd r *'r Anybody- Who wishes to procure good things to eat and drink of superior quality at reasona ble rates should see us, for we sell them. Fruits and Produce Tobacco, Cigarettes Cigars, Candies and Chewing Gum. Al so Bottle and Fount Drinks and so forth Fresh Fish on Saturdays Fresh Oysters Every day NEW LUNCH STAND We conduct a lunch stand, where we are prepared to serve the public with good lunches and sandwiches. Give us a trial. H. D. Lewallen Phone 239. Near S.A.L. Depot Land For Sale 160 acres, 4 1-2 miles south of Dacula, Ga., 4-room house, 3-horse farm, barn, good pasture. 25 acres of original forest, plenty of wood, pub lic road divides it. Selling tor only $35 per acre. 40 acres red land, good house and outbuild ings, 4 miles east of Winder, at S9O per acre. 330 acres, Hancock county, Ga. 4-horse farm open, 3 tenant houses. Thousands of feet of second-growth pine and hardwood timber, 90 acres in bottoms, at $25 per acre. Easy terms. 785 acres m Hancock county, 6-room dwell ing, 7 tenant houses, large barn. 3 miles hog wire fence, on public road and mail route, phone line. In 1 1-2 miles of schools, churches and stores. Gin and corn mill with 30-horse-power engine and boiler goes with this. 10-horse farm open, and over a million feet of saw timber. Sold together at $25 per acre, or will cut and give choice at S3O. Tenants wanted for 8-horse farm. City property for sale and rent. Loans made. W. H. QUARTERMAN, Atty. WHEN YOU ARE HUNGY We will give you what you want at our Lunch Counter. We are prepared to serve you at all times. Also in connection, we carry a full line of Fancy and Family Groceries, Cigars, Tobaccos, Snuff, etc. Call and see us, we will be glad to serve you at any time. CARRINGTON BROTHERS Phone 30 Strange Street Name*. What Is the quaintest street name you know of in London, past or pres ent? It would probably be hard, re lates the London Chronicle, to beat Shalllgonaked street, which, according to the late Sir Laurence Gomme's evi dence before the local records com mittee, appears as the name of a street In Wapplng in a sewers rate book for 1748. In those days the naming ef a street was not in the hands of a sedate public authority, hence tba oddity of •ohm of these old names. Term “The Public." What we understand today by the term “the public" did not exist during antiquity, as it presupposes a gwJLt number of simultaneous readers of one and the same writings, a condition that conld not be realized before the invention of printing. The first book that may be said to have had a public In the sense as now understood was the printed Bible. The essential lr> etrument, however, for the e< “a public," journalism, did naPap pear before the French revolution.