The Vienna progress. (Vienna, Ga.) 18??-????, August 04, 1904, Image 1

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|JlT0|prC!50* V01 -5P D tsonc IJ inm, NO 61 VIENNA, GA. THURSDAY, AUGMST 4 1004 $1 A YEAR IN ADVANCE more eoul food in a good in a bad sermon. do a little ibmg well it y becomes a big thing. : D • engine that quantity of love us up for quality of love. P. if politeness cost money then ■id be more of it in the wou Tl alder girl is now the boat- ing >ud the bathing girl at the wate places. M cc to see their wives well drci .ter than they like to pay forti ■sscs. H can’t repeat itself too oitei i youngster when it comes in tL po of a circus. Sc ut crnational marriages aro like iiymes; they begin so well and i ■ badly. It cry uncomfortable for a girl it throe in a buggy seat wliei* threo arc all girls. Vi • forget that the cook book aud umble are more important in tl ig run than the novel and tbe i glass. A aan who was lately di- vorc q noted as saying: “There are uany men in the world to be v. py with one oi them. ” AT THE FAIR. The display mndo by Georgia at the world’s fair, furnishes mauy pleasantj surprises for tho Georgia visitor, and in view of tho small leg islative appropriation, and because of the varied onterosts it touches, is a center of attraction ftr all visitors Georgia’s exhibits a"c evon more of a credit to the state than if they had been made wholly out of legis lative appropriations, demonstrated in this effort to put the good old state ana its mngnifiucnt resources to the front. cotton merchants of the Stato. In tllis cotton dome is also a full and complete display of the sen-island cottons. The Southern Cotton Oil Com pany, \V. W. Gordon & Co,, of Savannah, and the Augusta Ex change, havo made the successful cotton and cotton seed prospects exhibit decidedly the hansomest and most complete of Us kind in the entire building. The central leaturo of this is composed of a large glass fountain flowing cotton seed oil at a rate of This is the first and only time I 50 gallons per minute that Georgia has been adequately represented at any World’s Fair, and the results obtained with the j limited facilities at hand havo very gratifying. The Mineral exhibit shows that i there is no state in the Union, nor foroign country that has more, val uable or varied doposits, whore tho conditions are such that they can bo mined and manufactured with bolter results, than Georgia. Vi on hear wives spoken of as t taker vessels, but the faot remi indisputable that the hits- bam ays go broke first. a ■g a lawn mower is a good pby . culture proscription for a won nit tho neighbors abuse her husi f he lets her try-it. N g makes that pretty and flirt < girl so mad as to have the ig man banging aromul mak ovo to her when the rignt man signt. <t world is an echo which re turn oar own words; for which veasi i f one would be weil spoken of ii i! world, he must speak well of tl orld.” V, i yon begin a little argvt- men. illi your better , half stop and int ten, tfyon remember how droa 1 you felt after your last bou Fighting doesn’t pay unless one i professional and in the ring. D 't disappoint your mother and : uer by treating home as a lodg ' house and themselves as pers h to be worked for all you can a out of them, without any rotu ■ iu love or consideration or com . iionship. The tion are and othi A 98, fed der woi old sue d men delegates to the interna ngress in Berlin, Germany •o received by the empress •anbellor, von Buelow and se highly honored. ■man out in Minnesota, aged got a new set of teeth, she If on a teaspoon! ull of pow rslorshells every aay. And it But one must be 98 years avo the experiment a completo married state has been defined as icial dispensation of prove den . for the happiness of mankind or , i an ingenious invention of the devil in order to tie people togeather who ere sure to make each other miserable, Beauty is a source of peril as well as 08 power to,women. Not only does beaittj in woman bring to the surface all that badness that lurks in men, but it subjects the women that pos ess it to conditions which tend to im Pair'dfiaraotor. The general agricultural display in space 74, practically ir. the cen ter of the Palace of Agriculture, presents to the inquiring public an absolute refutation of the idoa that Georgians do not, or cannot, sub sist on exclusively home products Tncro are 80 varieties of hay, 50 odd varieties of peas, a magnificent ease of Georgia meats and Georg'a corn, showing that “hog and homi ny” is raised at home. A full and Through tho liberality of tho com piote exhibit of grasses and Board of Trade of Savaiiuah thero is the Forestry oxhibit a magnificent display, completo iu evory respect, oui the pine tree to its finished products, including a turpentine plant kindly loaiiod by McMillan Bros., with all of the tools needed for tho purpose of gathering, manu facturing and marketing this val uable product in the state. All of the by-produots of distilled oils from the rosin are admirably shown by that portion of the exhibit fur nished by S. P. Shottcr & Co. Through the public spirit and progreasivenes: of the Georgia Syrup Association the state demon strates lhe delicate flavor of this proa act in a manner that is at tractive to all visitors. Capt. W. W. Thorpe, of Wayoross, donated miniature cabin made of Georgia pine logs, and occupied by atypical •mammy” who dispenses iu that way that no orher but an an ante bellum “mammy” knows, waffles and cakes made of,Georgia-grown materials, dashed with Georgia cane syrup. The results of this display are manifold. In the central dome of the Pal ace of Agriculture is a cotton dis play contributed by the prominent grains of all kinds, 'pecans, ground peas, corns, cottons, and in fact all things that go to make up a com plele agricultural display, arc in eluded. Very few are aware of the extent of the tobacco industry ot tho state and tho exhibit in tobacco has exci ted universal admiration, not only from Georgians visiting the Fair but also those interested in tobacco manufacture and culture everywhere The UGorgin' state building as generally knoiyn, was built by funds contributed by the different cites of the state, uuder the direot supervis ion of Capt, II. H. Tift of Tifton The building is complete in every respect, and attracts as much, if not more, attention than any on the grounds, owing to the fajt of its be ing a reproduction of Southerland, the home of General John B. Gordon a typical Southern Home. It 1b tho only building on the grounds entire- ly furnished with material made and brought from home.. Tho northern people who "havo been kicking up such a.raokot over the lynching of negroes in the south have found out how tho lynoh- lug act is performed, and are at it themselves. In tho south thoy arc lynohed only for tho blackest ot crimes. In tho north they are lynch ed on gonernl principles. Among the numerous supersti tions among the Cossaoks there is none stranger than the belief than they will cuter heaven in a better state if they aro personally oloan at the time thoy aro killed. Conse quently before an expected battlo they porform their toilets with soru dulous care,, dress thcuiBclvcs in qlcan garments and put oil the best thoy have. For sanitary reasons Japanese surgeons urge tho Mikado’s soldiers to do the same. A team of horses whoso combin ed weight Is out a few pounds less than 5,000, is cortaiuly a rare sight, and it is gravely to bo doubted if tboir equal has ever been soon be fore. They were, nooorduig to tbe regular market report of horse dealings of the Now Yoric Herald, purchased by J. A. Bailey last win ter for Barnum «fc Biuloy’s big show. Tho animals stand nearly ninetoen hands high, and thoir size is not represented by their height “If the press of the world,” said the Hon. John Hay, of St. Louis “would adopt aud persist in the high resolve that war shoukMio no more, the clangor of arms would cease from, the rising of tho’ sun to its going down, and we could f ir.oy that our cars, no longer stunned by tbe din of armies, might hear tho morning stars singing together, and all the sons of God shouting for joy. ” That is “taffy” for the news paper men, and that is all that amounts to. Hogs aro so prolific that it takes but a short time to establish a herd ffoni a single trio. To attempt improvement from dogeuevato sires is usually found to be a short-sighted policy. Three times as miicn water is re quired by a cow when she is giving milk as when she is not. Ouo advantage in raising good hotsos is that they are one product that the farmer is able to set his own price on. Tho Soorotary of tho Intorior has withdrawn 07,020 acres of land in tho Glcnwood Springs, Col., dis trict In connection with the White River reclamation projoot. Until tho farms are build up iu fertility the average yields of our crops cannot bo iuoroasod. Until good prices prevail year after year the fertility cannot bo restored. This is tho time for the iarmors and others to out down tho obnox- iovs weeds along tho public high ways, fence-rows and other by- places on their premises. Do not wait uhlil the seed ripens. It is always a good sign to soe a man stop a farmer and ask him if he dosircs to sell tho horse ho is driviug. It speaks well for both farmer and liorso: Bayers always want to buy a good horse. . The following iB just as true to day as when printed in tho Cabinet sixty-five years ago: With no in heritance but health, with no riohea but industry, and with no ambition but virtue, the farmer is the sole king among men, and the only man among kings. There should always be “an open door” to the best room in the house. The air and sunshine should bo let in ana the rollicking hoy should be let in occasionally to see the wonders in brio-a-brac. Let the sun fade the carpet if it will, but let it shine in. Live for something. Do good and leave behind yo'u a monument of vii lure that' tno storms of life can never dustroy. Write your name on the hearts ol'the tbousands you como The Smith family, without gard to brand, variety or earthly possessions, without regard to raoo color, condition or preuious state of servitude, are invited to unite in Louiavillo, Ky., this summer, one The Georgia commissioners esteem of the Smiths of the city putting it'a pleasure alld a privilege to re- j up $25,000 to eutertaiu them: And | hi contact Vith year by year, and ccive any and all Georgians and aid | they’ll all be thero. The good, the | you will never bo torgotteh. Good tnem in making the necessary com-j bad-and the indifferent Smiths will parieous for their own satisfaction. | b e there. Yes, the Smiths, the j Smithes, the Smyths, the Smythcs, < • Scbmi'ts will bo there, and that limning INIOtiCC *25,00Q will not last till dinner time of th'e fiist day. The Vienna Cotton Oil Company will run both the up town and down town Gins this season. The management has taken the trouble to put both these plants In first-class condition. The one down town will pack both round and square bales, while the up town gin will pack square bales only. riessrs. A. J. Shell and C. A. Joiner, both well known by the people of this section, will have charge of these gins, Mr. Shell having the manage ment of the up town and Mr Joiner the down town gin. We propose to give first ola^s service in every re spect and we wish to notify the public that we will not gin any wet cotton knowingly as it will not only gives a poor sahiple, but interferes with the opera tion of the gin, thereby, causing our. patrons to wait an unnecessary time to get their cotton and a use- jess expense to koep ’the gins In repair, therefore, parties bringing such cotton to tjie gin and causing us to shut down on this account, will be charged the actual cost of time lost. Thanking you for past patronage and asking for a continuance of same, we remain, Very trolly yours, VIENNA COTTON OIL CO. deeds will shiuc as bright ou the earth as the stars of heaven. In years gone by children were forbidden to jump rope because it was bad for the heart, but now it seems that the seekers for health declare that skipping is a healthful excroisc and that she who wishes to bo graceful should take to skipping every morning a certain number of times, taking care lo breatho slowly ana regularly. A woman to be the'best home maker needs to bo devoid of intensive nerves. She must be neat and sys tematic, but not too neat least she ae3troy the comfoit she endeavors to create. She must be distinctly amiable, while firm. She should have no career or desire for qiirecir.' She must be affeotionato, syrhpa- thetio and patient and fully appreci ative o f the worth and dignity of her pphere. Of course everybodycadnotdwn fine It is a great convenience in driv ing through tho country to see the names of the farmers on tboir mail boxes by the roadside. The man should be personally identified with the place he farms. Eyen if there is no business to transact with thef farmer at the lime or in the future the passer-by takes an interest in this place or that as he sees the na tural beauty, improvements, man ner of farming and keeping up the premises, the flocks, herds, etc., and he would like to know who is responsible for that soft ot place.' He may meet the farmer, see his name in print or hear it mentioned, and it will increase interest in the form and farmer to be able to associate the two. As the. paint wears pff the mail box the pyyner’fy name becomes too dim^to ; read|anjfl, shopld be 'renewed m plain,,blaok letters, jyybether the fftrippr Byes , , .. on a small route, or noPty wojil(d.b e iWW Acquire both the \ automobile a very nice thing to put up,a; sign' complexion and the automobile face giving the name of the farmer, and ( by going fishing, this?.hot weather, if he be a tenant to also give the and strangers will never know the name of the owner of the place. j difference. . an automobile, btifc' they 1 can iriex- pensively ’ acquire ad dtitomotiile j^qmplexioniih'tbe 1 ‘giffleh \ add W 'a Ijtywe practice - before' a glass they may also get the squint, or they < l‘ « >rt<uo jbWi ! .cm . y\. L IJ ; ' ‘3