The Lyons progress. (Lyons, Ga.) 19??-1991, August 18, 1905, Image 3

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I ==== _ ======= I 1 of Every j \ i 1 $ O Are Being Offereu in O T. i __=_=====___= § I Spring anjp bummer Goods.j | 8 This is Mid=Summer 'and we 8 « must clean our shelves of all « I Remnants at LESS THAN COST. 1 | COME AND SEE US. 1 I FURNITURE AND HOUSE FURNISHINGS. | W. A. McNATT, j l %wxxxatx%,xiiix*x>iex9gFxx,xX'XxxxxxxxxxxxxMxsvx%& ll® W hat a Mason Should Be. ■■ sou should b** of approved |®W| .y. Hr.should be thoroughly trust wort hv in evcrv wav. • i * He should be a man who will not deliberately prevaricate. He should be of irreproachable character and unblemished repu tation. He should be a brave man, fearing nothing but to he untrue to his obligations. He should he one to whom an other interest or honor may be committed with safety. He should be a masonic student the study and mastery of the rit ual will broaden and enrich his mind. His adherance to the principles of Free Masonry cannot but make him truly virtuous and God-fear ing. There is not a single virtue which Free Masonry does not in culcate, not a solitary truth of pure and undefiled religion which it does not urge.—Ex. , Your Wife’s Rights. Every man in Tattnall county who has a good wife should give her the following rights and if he don’t do that he is not a good hus band nor a good citizen. To love. To be loved. To be told so frequently. To have their effort appreciated. To have their sympathy prized. To be convinced home is not the same place without her. To have her judgment referred to sometimes. To have her ideas met with sypathetic toleration if not with a complete understanding. To have a great, big-hearted boss who will let her think she is having her own way, while he gently but firmly keeps ‘.her from making a fool ts herself. —Jour- nal. Two Boys ‘ He was a city youth, panoplied in full arrav. according to the iat •st stvie. His trousers were big at the top and small at tin* bot tom; his colored shirt was decor ated with collar and cuffs: his i straw hat was smashed in at just the right piaee: his coat was two sizes too big and hung in front like an army blanket on a beau pole; his shoes was as yellow as a sun flower and his necktie looked like a feverish sun-set. He was a country youth arrayed just as he was when lie left the field to come to town after a re pair for the harvester. He wore a gingham shirt, a pair of greasy overalls, cow-hide shoes and a bat tered straw hat. ‘•What a guy,” sneered the city youth? ‘‘Did you ever see such a get up?” And the city youth glanced at his good clothes which papa had purchased and lighted a cigarette purchased with money he had begged from mama. ‘•Looks like a circus,” muttered the the country youth,, glancing at the working clothes in which he had earned the SBOO l.e had snugly tucked away in the bank. —Ex. With only nineteen more coun ty tax returns to be recieved, Captain Tip Harrison, assistant to the comptroller general, gives it as his opinion that the aggre gate increase in taxable property in Georgia this year as compared with the returns of 1904 will be $40,000,000. First he guessed $25,000,000. That was more than a week ago. More returns shows lager increases, so several days ago Captain Harrison pushed his estimate up to $84,000,000. Now he adds $7,000,000, and he may increase that. THE LYONS PROGRESS. AT'OEST IS. 1005 I Popular priced Bring trade j ✓ • * / 2 / 2 | I And as it's trade we 1 want, we are offer- I ing goods at Popular \ Prices. I 8 I I : I CLOTHING,' SHOES, I DRY-GOODS, Dress | Gooods, gents furn- I isltings. ■ ' | Stetson Hats a Specialty | E. L. PAGE, LYONS, GA. | xx%x%x%xxx3tx3^yxxyx%vv^v^, ir ■ ™" i . I And as we have a few Odds and | Ends of the Sommer Stock we \ will sell all left over goods at | Unheard of . I BARGAINS. | [ | Come and see \ what we have. \ No trouble to | show you why | we Want Trade. \ Everything you want, and a 5 fine line of Fresh Groceries 5 besides. Fall and Winter Goods.