The Milledgeville news. (Milledgeville, Ga.) 1901-19??, January 16, 1909, Image 3

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Get Your Cabbage Plants From Us. HT*Send your order now, for it is time to plant. All best varieties for thia section, deliveries quick ms possible. Cheapest prices for varieties of highest grade. Address Box K, or sible. Cheapest prices tor vanet Phone No. 38, Miliedgevilln, Ga. ♦ * * Sec that the next sack of Flour ; I that you get from your grocer is just like this cut It will be worth 4 \ l your troble. | :3V. Carr SOLE DISTRIBUTORS .u W VRAT IS M0ST IMP0RTANT TO YOU When You Bun Sued Quanta or Price? Each are important points t# omskler but QUALITY must be FIRST, always. QUALITY, is irct hi asWetiaff. fro winy and selling ALEXANDER’S need and ear prices are right. ALEXANDER'S seed ere CHEAP because they crew end grow what fes want, better seed can not bo bought. Send for our latest catalog on any seed you aood for Fall ptaatlng \ \ < THE ALEXANDER SEED CO. AUGUSTA, GEORGIA. BOX 40. Cramps Thousands of ladies suffer agonies every month. [ I If you do, stop and tb ink. Is it natural ? Emplmti- jcally and positively—NO! Then make up yourj mind to prevent or cure this needless suffering! Strawberries For The Home Garden They Cam be Grown on Al most any Farm or in the Garden. “Strawberries always are profited by mulching,'’ writes a correspondent, but adds, “I do not understand how to do this successfully." Yes, one thing ^ that always does good to a strawberry patch U to mulch It in fall and winter. As cold weather comes on and the plants naturally go Into winter quarters, It is time to'apply the mulch. If It Is done too early the plants will bo smothered and hurt. The best material to use. In layer ing the beds or rows of plants Is al most anything In the way of coarse vegetation that Is free from weed seeds. Clean straw or coarse grass are of this character, but it Is rare that they are so, but rather that there U more or loss weeda tn with the traw or grass. Timothy hay Is always troublesome, because of the seed it contains, and coarse manure that has any considerable proportion ef It is objectionable on that account. Marsh grass or cattail Rags are tree from anything that la troublesome. The refuse from sorghum mills can be used with very good results. It lies otose to the' ground, and If not putc on too thickly, will serge the purpose of keeping the strawberry plants from feeling the stolen changes of winter, retain the moisture In the soil, and keep the berries clean the following summer. Corn fodder arlll sot something In the same way. If mulch (a put on very thlokly In winter. It win not hurt then, but must be partly raked off the rows very ear ly In the spring and left between them. If this Is delayed until after before one reallsee It, there will be serious Injury.—Home and Farm. HORRIBLE EXAMPLES. Sometimes you meet a lovely maid. Whose beauty has no taint. And get a sudden shock, because You hear her say: “It ain't!" Chicago's earnest motto Is “I will!” and not “I won't!" And yet there are Chicago girls Who calmly say: - “He don’t" And so tt goes. Ip Boston, whore There’s culture beyond price, You sometimes hear the quick re mark: "Say, hpydon’t cut no ice!" There even Is a man from Maine, Who loves to chaff and quia. And you would be surprised to know He often says: "They Is!" —Somerville Journal. Horses that are of a tfOrvous and rretful disposition will b« more satis factory in buttles than whm hitched to plows. Ths. plow horse must bo pteady. ■ A horse needs a wider and more ex clusive a tall than does u cow. It should be wide enough so that the horse can lie comfortably and stretch out Its logs, but not so wide that ho can roll In It. •tfr — “Man's dearest things ars nearest him. Lie close about his feet." TAKE It Will Help Yon J 32 *'I suffered 9 years” writes Mrs. Sarah J. Hos- I kins, of Cary, Ky. ‘ ‘ I had female trouble and would nearly cramp to death. My back and side would | nearly kill me with pain. I tried everything to get | relief, but failed, and at last began to take Cardui. Now I can do my housework with ease and I give | | Cardui the praise for the health I enjoy.” Try. AT ALL DRUG STORES ’ - And In sptto of this too many look <sr away and And only failuro. Well after this seriousness hero Is to the joy of the New Year and may •ach of the readers have a happy and proaperous In every wsy and make other hearts glad also. * or it may be that ere the year Is passed our lives will be as a story that s told, and the privilege of giving will be denied.—Inland Farmer. During (lie past year ihe osmirt, of Jersey cattle from the Isle of Jersey, the homo of this grade, have alniobl doubled. MUST LABEL 3TORAGE EGGS. Tennessee dealers have been given mtlce from the office of Dr. 1 uclub Brown, state pure food storage ■;gs must ho sold as such and lha; hatevt-r dealers aro detected 8 lllng ■Id storage goods for fresh eggs they 111 be prosecuted for violation of the ore food statute. The statute pro- des a heavy penalty, for viol ition, nd dealers are greatly concerned. It .'III serve to Increase the demand for resh eggs. Dr. Brown recently gave lotlce that dealers would bo prose cuted for selling oleomargarine for butter, and the members of one firm were arrested for an alleg-d viola fr Ion. Tbo enforcement of pure food statutes Is very popular with many of he dealers and consumers and it Is believed Is resulting In a great im provement. FROST PROOF CABBAGE PLANTS GUARANTEED TO SATISFY PURCHASERS VAURELb HUgLHmil UkUM SKOrOTKIOE A! ' a Ti.*'CXAJ4 Efl< >LT«TW* UUi TTFK WAENVUDJ) Tb* tasrU-t • !.»lm FLAT DUTf'Ii Crt—f* Ow tt fcdt £ Ihi UmI VmFQ u~» ■ iiMm UyH ms* Uim wt Is to at l u I BL It JUI pa ■. I •> I ■. <l tLti f*t m. It n. rU me, tf IU» jtr a. F. 0. B. YOUNG'S ISLAND, S. C. Oar Special Express Bates on Hants fs Very Low. We grew the first Frost Proof Pints in 1868. Now have over twenty thousand satisfied customers; and we have grows sad sold mere cabbage plants teas al other persons in the Southern states coobiaed. WHYi because our plants must please or we send your money bock. Order now; it is time to set these plants in your sec tion to get extra early cabbage, and they are the ones that .<■!' Vr**e most money gp* al Ei'RM '•* orrv-MM wUn mak« ui» d-* OrtfwrA Wr* * ttaXGa'^yC;-. «v. 121 v^skUais. y BLACK PEPPER FOR POULTRY. There la as much difference In the effect that black and rod pepper haa on chicken*, aa there is almost be tween wheat and corn. Rod pepper acts as a hurtful stimulant, blarlt pepper as a wholesome corrective. Chlckenr. and turkeys that aro fed black popper, always thrive. In the writer's experience, whenever 1 have a chick that seems out of sorts, the very first thing I do, is to give % grain of black popprr, of course, the chick must have g-lt that Is good and sharp lo digest It well, bul sham aril trust rl~u. * be «l baud, if birds would la say nicesuto thrive.—‘ Poul try Life la it> flew * There la no section of country in the world where commercial aanre- rnacy can so* easily be ghlnifd as that of the South. She produc-a the load ing ataple money crop of the world, and about three times as much of it as all the world beside. WU1 aha awaken to her opportunity, ar will ahe “aell her birthright for a mesa of pottage?" TRUE AND FAITHFUL. One does not look for the whole truth upon a tombstone, but there ars exceptions to ^ raid, say a Harper's Weakly, m is shown by the example furnished in a churchyard in Hager stown. Md. This touching epitaph runs ss tal lows, except that fictitious name* have, for obvious reaeons, been sib- ■tltuted here for the real ones: Mary E. t' \ .Wife of Walter Jeafetna. Died December 16, llfU, .aghd T9 yean 9 months. ,, She wm a true sad falthtat wife to caoh of the following persona: Jacob Wtnemab. ” Henry Snow. Philip Harrow. Walter Jenkins. , QOOO FOR THEM. It s'good for all old sinners IIore, ln the New Year atate. That heaven.'don't‘hear ’em swearfn off: !•'•* ; The distance is too great! A skit t—Do you believe in thsL,the ory of heredity? Noltt—Sure thing. My barber is the father of three Ilttra shavers.— Chicago News. It is not enough to tell the cotton, raiser that he must bold lUs cotton, be must bo educated why bo should hold It. He should be shown that it moans industrial freedom for him and his family, as well as commercial in dependence for the South. Hla lore for his family and his patriotism should be appealed to. Are you getting some of those high priced iggs reader? if you nre not there is something wrong. I hear .oiks say tlioir nens have ceased lay tig entirely. llo.v to manage the farm hens to get at h'ast a few oi ihe high priei d (y.gs Is a mighty In .'resting question; H will pay us ti road about, lalk about and study.— ii land Parmer. Yes. feed Is high In price but there s a good market for pou'try pro ducts. And nothing Is gained but much la lost by half feeding. , Supplier of fresh eggs continue light and prices high. Yet high price* do not seem to hurt the'de mand very much. Kggs ar# one of the necessities among all classes. Though very nigh in price consum ers are using them and will continue to use them. Thtlr continued free, use depend* more upon the quality .of the eggs than the price. The man of woman behind the In cubator determines to a great extent whether tbe machine will prove pro fitable or otherwise. PLANT GOOD GARDED SEED, ) Be sore and obtain our garden seed for j spring planting, cabbage, turnip, col- t lards; and all varieties, including toms- toes, 2 packeges for 5 cents We will be sure to please you in every way, Try S. .7. STEHBrtTLGE. West Sad. — Best lump Un:e. Portland cement rnd plaster Paris. Emmett Ta Pirrcr. 1 Silm-Lacefl Motte. Like th i ove of a Wom^n;> Ada^te^t^^nyjCHin^g, We once knew a farmer who planted his cotton late in or* der to save one "working/' and by doing ao, he saved two "pickings,” the same thing applies to chickens, if you want to raise nice ones, haten them off early. Eggs One Dollar for a Setting of Fourteen. G. H. Bonner, P. O. Box 112, Milledgdville. Ga. v. H. M , Successor to BRAKE & MOBS Practical Plumbing and Steam Repair Work a Specialty. All* orders given prompt Attention.; .V, V H. M Milledgevilie. Georgia. r 5 ^8F V V V V 'i PEACHES FAIRVIEW CANNING FACT ? •V MILLEDGEVILLE, GA. J, dark Milling Go. AUGUSTA. GA. Manufacturers of the Blue Ribbon Winner “Survivor Flour” Also Other High-Grade Flours* Meal? Grits and Feed Stuffs* “Survivor” the Blue Ribbon Winner for three consecutive years is the purest, best, most wholesome Flour sold in the maret. Made from selected grains, by the most perfect machinery and in one of the sunniest corners of the Sunny South. JULES RIVAL, President W. B. YOUNG, Vice President W. M, DUNBAR Treas. & Gen’l Mgr. FRANK M.DUNRAR Secretary.