The Milledgeville news. (Milledgeville, Ga.) 1901-19??, February 06, 1909, Image 7

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'I Millinery * \ -AND ART NBEDLE WORK £ X MISS ELLEN EOX £ RhA ESTATE BAR iA \S —Having moved to Griffin, Ga., I offer- 24 Building Lots Scittered over the best and fastest growing section of Mill- edgeville at great bargains in order to close them out at once. Most of the lots are unimproved, but all are de sirable, some for business and some for residences. Pick out the lot vou want and write to me. WALTER J. VAUGHAN Care of Middle Georgia Farmer. GRIKFIN, GA. fcj=^a . -s! i—— —j— —a IM1LLEDGEV1LUE BRICK WORKS- T- W McMILLAN, Proprietor, Milledgeville, Ga. One Million Brick Now in Stock. * * & Can fill all orders at once with the best brick that can be made. Capacity and output greatly increased, so that large orders can be filled immediately. Correspondence solicited. B STEVENS ARMS are for sale by aU progressive Hardware and Sporting Goods Merchants and DAX BEARD'S tplmdid ifori —'"GUNS AND CUNN1NG”- will bo mailed postpaid to c. } | applicant by J, Stevens Arms It Topi. Compart, Chioopoo ' Falls, Mass., upon receipt of price. \ For poper coTcrcdi- lion forward 20cenls; forcloth bound book send SO punts. \ 'JL* if m w \ Written for«lnlpUl»- halted bjr A LETTER FROM NORTH CAROLINA Warrcnion, N. C.—I was nearly dcac with kidney affection for six month grnrin sc all tlic time. Kv c: a ’S I was unable to get al: n. bal iii I.. d tried everything will I took three hollies o fttn-ir* ".a and Juniper and \vn i. Am now well and al T life io Stuart’s Buchi < "'1 •' iL T. Macon. with li.-ickaehc, dull head ’ • h h rtiff joints, and ban •re inis(rinary specks it V ii. - e svniptoms of kidney t i end Juniper will relieve f .-.his, #1.0(1. Write to- 5- We will send enough L- prove olerful merit*. Sbwt Drug Manufacturing Co ATLANTA. GA. HOG FOOD. For the farmer to feed and fatten hoers. cows, horses, mules, etc. Oconee River Mills. 33 WXX.SON WILL Appreciate an order from you, large or ■mall. Try him and you will be Bleaaed, and give him a share of your trade hereafter. Wayne street, MilledgeviUa, Georgia. Anyone having city or farming land to sell or wish ing to purchase desirable ouilding lots or farming lands will do well to see Mr. J. O. Bloodworth. EXCURSION FARES TO MOBILE, PENS/1 LOLA AND. NEW ORLEANS, LA. VIA CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RAILWAY COMPANY Account Mardi Grab Celebration February 18-88. 1909. Excursion tickets will be sold t< Mobile, Pensacola and New Orleans -r February 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, good tr leave those points returning up to am including, but not later than midnigh of March 1, 1909, except that and ex tension to March 13th may be obtained by deposit of ticket and payment o extension fee of $1. For furthei information in legard t total rates, service, etc., apply t nearest ticket agent. St- Stephen’s Episcopal Church Rev. Wm. Russell ^carritt, D. D Rector. Sunday services—Morning Prayer anr Sermon, 11 a. m. Sun lav School, 9:30. Friday Evening Prayer, 4 p. m. Holy Communion, the First Sunday in. the month. The Rector and hi? family will be at home to frinds each Monday night from 8 to 10 o’clock. The man who goes with the majori ties only borrows strength. He's a leech-nothing more. Some journals now-a-days are to the public press what scavenger wagon are to city governments Plant Wood’s Seeds For The Garden 6 Farm. Thirty yean in business, with A steadily increasing trade every year—until we have to-day one of the largest businesses in seeds in this country—is the beat of evidence as to f Ibe Superior Quality of Wood's Seeds. We ara headquarters for Grass and Clover Seeds, Seed Potatoes, Seed Oats, Cow Peas, Soja Beans and All Farm Seeds. Wood’s Descriptive Catalog the moat useful and valuable of Garden and Farm sped Catalogs mailed free on request. T.W. WOOD (SONS, Seedsmen, . Richmond, Va. THE HOME CIRCLE COLUMN. Pleasant Evening Reveries—A Column Dedicated to Tired Mothers as They Join the Home Circle at Evening 1 Men and women don’t need to swing clubs to threaten home concord. The husband, armed with a sneer, and the wife who carries waspish tongue, are just as well comparisor.ed for death dealing battle, as though they pounded each other with baseball bats. Sar casm and nagging are to the atmosD- here of love what sand-flies and fleas are to summer weather. Who would not prefer an occasional brush with a roaring June bug, to the eternal tel- ment of a flea you can’t catch? OOO Womans’s character has been likened to a postage stamp—one black mark ruins it. Man’s like a treasury note- no matter how many stains, it still on it to parties, dances a polka with it, exchanges ‘ billet doux” with it, pops the question to it, gets accepted by it, takes it to the parson, weds it, calls it "wife,” carries it h>me, • la up an establishment with it, introduces it to his friends and says he too is married and has a home. It is false. He is not married; he has no home. And he soon finds it out. He is in the wrong box, but it is too late to get out of it, he might as well try to get out of his coffin. His friends congratulate him and he has to grin and bear it, If a young man would escape these sad consequences, let him shun the rocks upon which so many ve been shipwrecked. Let him disregard passes at par. This double standard I who »y »» considerations of wealth, established by society is not just, but it' exterDal accomplishments, is recognized the civized world over.' f » 9hion - connections in society, and . every other mere selfish and worldly ' end and look in to the mind ana heart Live a Happy Life- , woman j,o thinks of marrying. The married life, though entered jf be cannot love her for herself alone ever so well, and with all proper prep- j _that is for all that goes to make up aration, must be lived well or it will not jj er character as a woman—let him bo useful or happy, married lite will I disregard every external inducement, not go itself, or if it does it will not and shun a marriage with her as the keep the track. It will turn off at every switch and fly off at every turn oi impediment. It needs a couple of good greatest evil to which he co i.. bo sub jected. And if he has in him a spark of virtuous feeling,—if he has one un conductors who understand the engi- selfish and generous emotion—he will neering of life. Good watch mu» n 8 hun such a marriage for the woman’s kept fov breakers ahead. The fires sake also, for it would e sacrificing ru i. oi , mnt udditiin her hap well as his own. jf the f.- n ,Lection. The boilers o o o must be kept full and the machinery in flier, a . ail Hands at their posts, •tse there will be a smashing up, or life will go hobbling or jolting along, wearing and tearing, breaking and bruising, leaving some heads and hearts to get well the best way they can. It requires skill, prudence, and judgment to lead this life well, and these must be tempered with for bearance, charity, and integrity. o o 0 Give Kind Word*. How many hungry hearts there are in the world, hungering for recognition, for a word of praise! The hungriest nearc in this world is an unpraised wo man whose hubband never gives ner a word of praise or recogition for a sacri fice made in his behalf. Love may be • i. ublio Sohoola. Every member of a community and especially every parent should taka a deep interest in the public Bchool. It is not enough to pay your school tax with out ccmplaining, or to know that the teachers are qualified, nor is it even enough to keep your childron in school regularly. If you are really interested in the subject as you should be, you should visit the shcool regularly and per sistently. Few people have any idea what an incentive It is to loth teacher and scholar to know that parents and outsiders are taking a lively interest in their work. We believe the “little folks" at school appreciate such Inter est more perhaps than the larger ones. Still the effect is not lost on any of them, and wo hope every parent will here in his heart for her, love deep anatake a hint from this and place the ibiding, and shoal j death claim her, the fountains of his heart would be broken up and he would realize what he hud lost, and cover her grave with roses, Public school on their visiting list, ooo Poverty is uncomfortable, but nine cases out of ten, the best thing that can Butter and eggs, always fresh, at C. E. Greene's. which, had they been present a single ( happc „ a youn * man ig to ba toased one at a time with a tithe of the tender-1 overboar(J and comDollod to 8 , nk or ness he now Bhows, her pathway would I swim for hlm „ c if have been far brighter and in her life a ray of sunshine, not that her burdens were diminished, but by a knowledge indisputable, that her efforts were ap preciated. A hungry* heart, which is destined never to be fed, is one of the saddest spectacles ever witnessed in this world oi our3. joj have a wuru of praise to bestow on your wife-il is due, bestow it. Do not wait until she is dead, and be forced thru blinding tears to tell your heart in its wild throb bing that you have lived a dual life bv stifling thoughts and keeping back words that would have brought a flush of pleasure to her checks, old as she is, and set her heart tc dancing with a pleasure only known to those who have liad their hungry hearts fed by words of praise and recommendation. Youu_ *i , a i Carriage. A young man meets u pretty face in the ball room, falls in love with it, courts it, marries it, goes to house keeping with it and boasts of having a home and a wife to grace it. Thi chances are nine to ten that he has neither. He has been "taken in and done for!" Her pretty face gets to be an old story, or becomes faded or freck led or fretted, and as the face was all he wanted, all he paid attention to, all he sat up with, all he bargained for, all be swore to love, honor and protect, he gets sick of his trade, knows of a dozen pretty faces he likes better, rives up staying at home evenings, con soles himself with cigars and politics and looks upon his homo as a very in different boarding house. Another .young man becomes er.-r air.orcd of a "fortune.”-' he waits i/p Tliere.ffcmweMet'all l*Mt»ni«»i>WlnjJ«Vnlln than «*f any mb.r m l- oil-. i-"«. 1 l.i> oci •Ofeunt ot their alylf, accuracy and omipl.oty. McCall's HIn*■ T.ln<•'Th«V»«W«i) Vii imwo »u’»ocrib*r« (him any r iher l.ntUrn Ma* line- a 1M1 trillion (ia number-) C*»*H Oil CCV »«••*•* f"* 1 fiimb-r, ft cm la. Fverjr ftubacfibmr gets a Met all 1 at fern Vrtc* Suhvcrifia teday. f.nSy A.eni. tVanii-S. Il.iidaaiwprriniiinnor litaTVj CMS rmnisiuh n. l'alimi< fnd r.-enil'im 4UJ |iien..ums ■rut lieu. Addict* THE McCAl.l. QO„ New Wk McCall Patterns and Publications for Sale by BMworth & SlemMge, LEADING DRY GOODS DEALERS. Milledgeville, Ga. 'erybodys ~igazuae Georoia GMoai WORKS Augusta, Ga. FERTILIZERS Of all Kinds P AP SCO The Original Fish Goods. . 35 continuous years of populai ity prove the success and| re liability of this soil restorer. B^*Sold exclusively at Milledgeville and vicinty by— Hori-flndrews Gom. Go: Southern Agmcmmst Nashville, tenn. For 40 Years the Most Instructlyejnd Entertaining Paper for Southern Farm Families. 50 Cents A.Year One Copy Free Genuine .mi k»o Goal, Unequalled for Domestic Purpos es. PROMPT DELIVERY. Phone 152. Fowler-Flemlster 6oal COMPANY. Coal and Wood. Lime and Cement. HOGLESS LARD The one anc. only absolutely pure cooking-fat that gives com plete satisfaction under all cul inary conditions. Far better and cleaner than the best hog-lard, and always goes farther. As good as butter for all kinds of cooking, from bread-baking to fish-frying. Made by Nature, and, therefore, of ^atural* purity. THE SOUTHERN COTTON OIL • CO i Js'cw York.;5avy:n)xibMtlar>ta -A r ewOrleans Chlaum HAS GOT THIS MONTH r * f i if ... Two screaming stories by Itllts Parker Butler and Lihdssv Deni.on, each raring to see which will Lytnp KILLr* POUCH Anb CURE*** LUNC8 your funny bone hardest. One tragedy that will grip your heart. ^Dr. lipgY; And article by Roiaell, Paine and Dickson that cut detji ffiio tilings.' , LOOK OUT P0B mBYBOOrS THIS / MONTH. THE CAT IS BACK New Discovery AND ALL THROA'CANO LUN0 TROUBLED. R. H. WOOTTEN. OOA8ANTK*) BATIB#AOTOKl ob xovsf|faruvft2!52 AND BOILERS fM** »rtfi ai Mi B.ARD, id