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A. + G. + RHODES,+ & +;CO.,
\ 1 K . / THE MS FURNITURE DEALERS!
a few prices which we guarantee cannot and will not be duplicated by any dealer in this part of the country:
Genuine; Silk Plush Parlor Suites from $35 to $45.
Only $45 for a 10 piece solid Walnut Marble-top Toilet suit of Furniture.
A 10 piece Maple Marble-top Toilet Suit for only $38.
, Only $30 for a 10 piece Imitation Marble top Toilet Suit.
"250 good, strong Bedsteads from $1 50 up,(and not made of pine either.)
Chairs, all styles, from 25 cents up.
Bureaus, with German Glass, only $5.' r v- -» r.
50 12x20 &
o<j|>o WE HAVE <Klt>o
Wardrobes, Sideboards, Hall Stands, Wash Stands, Safes, Tables, Cribs, Cradles, Baby Carriages, Clocks, Pictures, Look¬
Glasses, Chamber Suits, Tin Sets, all of which we will guarantee to sell you 20 cents cheaper than any other in the
ountry. this is because buy for
The reason why CAN and WILL do we our (17 ) seventeen Furniture Stores, scattered through
Southern States. We frequently place orders for $50,000 worth of goods from factory, when small dealers buy from
$ioo to $150 worth at the time. All of our purchases are made on the same plan, and you, as a man or lady, know that
we buy cheaper. So look to your interests and don’t buy an article of Furniture until you get our terms and prices.
A. G. RHODES & CO., 1017 Broad Street, Columbus, Ga.
AT BRUDDER JACKSON’S.
Why They Were Grateful on Thanks¬
giving Hay.
!®i ij
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“Chilluns and friends, j]]
we likewise am Mrs. now Jackson gathered # BA'W/. « kmm
around this festiferons f '■ ___
hoard Thanksgiving to discuss our V D
dinner, ■ what
and to keep the service in our hearts
we is ’minded of by this bountiful feast.
Now, my deah hearers, and likewise you,
Chilian, we is each of us to ’spress our
se'f in turn, an’ say what we is thankful
for. For myself, bein’ the oldest, I kin
say that I am thankful for everything;
most pertiklerest that I is ’bout over that
rheumatics that bodders me so, and that
Mrs. Jackson keeps in good helf and
plenty of washin’, and that my cliillun is
all goin’ to school and is a-growin’ up nice
and ginteel. Now, Mrs. Jackson, it’s your
turn.”
“I gives thanks to de Lord for all his
mussies; but I would like to say that I
is very glad that there ain't no ornery,
low down, white trash what can i>eat me
a-polishin’ nor a-cookin’, nor in looks
when I gets my Sunday close on.”
“Mrs. Jack .on,” said the old man, re¬
provingly, “that ain’t in order, but’low¬
ing that long as it’s so, ye ain’t no wise
to blame. Now, Cleopatra, let’s hyar
from you.”
“Law. paw, I don’t like to say, but I is
thankful all the same,” with a look at
■r. Rif Adonis Hawkins, who smiled back
he had the same reason for giving
Racial thanks.
R-‘Xow, Abraham Linken Jackson, tell
paw and all the company what you is
Re thankfulest fo~,” said the benign old
£tdfeer in Israel to the youngest member
of the family, after all the rest had ex¬
pressed themselves.
“I is thankful ’et that there ain’t no
more of us, ’cos if day wasdat dere tukky
ivouldn’t go ‘round!”
»»
A perfect world of Rockers, from 65 cents up to $16.
50 Imitation Marble-top French Dressers, 17x30 glass, only $8.
50 Marble-top French Dressers, 17x30 glass, only $14.
250 well made Cotton top Mattresses only $2 50.J
300 Bed Springs (12 styles) from $1 25 up.
Full Size No 6 Cooking Stove, complete, only $6 50.
Full Size No. 7 Cooking Stove, complete, only $8 50.
A Thanksgiving Sentiment.
McMaster, the historian, when asked
1 for a Thanksgiving sentiment wrote this:
“Every man today earns more money,
j wears better clothes, eats better food and
! of more kinds, lives in a more comfortable
1 home, knows more of the world, holds
; broader views than he could possibly have
done when the Nineteenth century came
in.”
The Pumpkin Pie.
Tis rhubarb pie iu early spring,
And gooseberry in June;
And Christmas time it’s rich mince pie,
Morning, night and noon.
But t he royal pie for Thanksgiving
Is pumpkin, golden yellow.
Ah! that’s the kind for me, if not
For any other feilow !
A CITY THANKSGIVING.
!
j Oh! russet is the forest,
J No leaves left on a tree,
No shelter there for fellows
Who tramp like you and me.
Oh! cold are country breezes,
And warmer is the town;
: go trav ling on our uppers,
! My chum and me comes down,
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Fer we’re sure of one good layout
Of turkey, m»*at and pies;
A real Tbankscrivinjr dinner.
Enough to fit our size.
And though we get no bae \v
And likewise bary beer.
We're mighty thankful, f<-r it
A THANKSGIVING SERMON.
Of all the days that have been set apart
as sacred to the people of this country, two
stand forth in holy radiance as the out¬
come of the purest sentiments. The one
is Decoration day, and the other Thanks¬
giving. The one was born in loving mem¬
ory of the dead, and the other in gratitude
to the bountiful Giver of all we enjoy.
The flowers we lay upon the graves of our
soldiers and lost ones are not sweeter than
the thanks we offer today. Borne, indeed,
may not give articulate sound to
thanks, but it is safe to say that in all
this broad land there is not one person
whose heart, whether it is weighed down
by sorrow or light with joy, does not send
at least one grateful thought toward the
source of all good, though perhaps they
are hardly conscious of it.
Gratitude for favors given is a pure and
ennobling sentiment, and meet is it that
this youngest and most signally blessed
country should set apart one day wherein
the whole nation, as one soul, should bow
in silent thanks for all the bounties and
blessings we enjoy. We receive the feast
in the spirit of a reminder that those
blessings are but a part of the abundant
store; and with the feasting the thanks¬
giving rises like incense, l-et there be no
empty tables in all the land, that not one
single heart fail to offer its meed; and let
us all “Praise the Lord for his good
works, for his mercy endureth forever.”
An Old Fashioned Pinner.
The following is the list of the dishes at
Thanksgiving dinner on a Pennsylvania
farm. Everything with the exception of
the pudding was placed upon the table at
once, to obviate the necessity of rising, as
the dear old hostess was none too strong
and kept no servants, and yet cooked it
all herself. At the head of the table was
a large chicken pie, in the middle two
roast chickens, and at the foot was mi
enormous turkey, and opposite the chick¬
ens a roasted pig. There were fourteen
pies of different kinds, three largo cakes,
crullers, preserves, pickles cf four kinds.
boiled onions, mashed potatoes, and tur
nips, applet cheese nuts, custard, head
cheese, biscuit, brown and white, bread,
and lastly a big plum pudding, and cofTee.
All this for thirteen persons. This dinner
was twelve years ago. and all the diner*
t- AtJO -
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