Newspaper Page Text
V
Millinery
-AND-
ART NBEDLE WORK
MISS ELLEN FOX
r
—i
THE HOME CIRCLE COLUMN,
Serious
SAMUEL EVANS, SON & CO,
Praise the work of your children, no
matter how trivial the act. It will Rive
them an honest desire to do better next
time.
Brother, when you come in from
j work in the evening, we all know you
| are tiied, but put on vour best look and
| assume a hapny mood; do not frown if
GOTTON* BROKERS flNDW^lRE»H0USEMENi t £i fl °° r >* notm,r
Engage the little folks just a little while
Every Accommodation and Convenience for
Our Customers and the Trade.
HIGHEST PRICES' PAID FOR COTTON
Your Patronage Solicited.
Pleasant Evening Reveries—A Column Dedicated to
Tired Mothers as They Join the Homo Circle at Evening
People who make mistakes are those
who quarrel with one another before
their children; or who allow the latter
to grow up in idleness; those who talk
about their troubles before strangers;
the father who tells his children to go
the way he does not go himself, and the
young woman who does not make a con
fident of her mother.
o o o
Rules Adopted by a Wise Girl.
As she was passing the other afternoon,
i.i netting something out of her pocket,
and get them to looking forward to
your coming with pleasure. It will help j a young woman dropped a slip of pn-
It is a very serious matter to ask
for one medicine, and have the
wrong one given you For this
reason we urge you in buying
to be careful to get the genuine
BLack-dpaughT
Liver Medicine
Tho reputation of thi3 old, relia
ble medicine, for constipation, in
digestion and liver trouble, is firm
ly established. It doe3 not imitate
other medicines. It is better than
others, or it would not be the fa
vorite liver powder, with a larger
sale than all others combined.
SOLD IN TOW1S F2
HR
WE
PAY
Highest Gash Price
For all Kinds of
COW PEAS
L'lllED HID nil."
n
to happify home wonderfully.
o o o
A girl who is gentle, bra/e and spirit
ed; who is unselfish, high- minded and
intelligent; who has sweetness and
depth of character; who does not think
of herself, hut works for the happiness
of others; who is merry and dainty and
wholesome, as a girl shoud be, will
never lack either lovers or friends. She
is the light of the home a good friend to
her sisters and brother, and the sun
shine of the old folks. God bless her.
Millcdgcville,
Georgia-
FROST PROOF CABBAGE PLANTS
•GUARANTEED TO SATISFY PURCHASERS
Aau., jamm
tw rv.
RHiiltT KTKMMtl,
fi.at mum
UffM, M. l-U-t ft'.bt—f« i
Ntt la to M I to i ■. >| II. 11 prr n. { le I a. « IMS per II at mt ntr. at S1.N per ■.
F. O. A. YOUNG’S ISLAND, S. C. Our Special Express Ram on Plants Is Very Low.
• Wc grew the first Frost Proof Plants in 186&. Now have over twenty thousand
satisfied customers; and wc have grown and sold more caMtage plants titan all other
pertoaa in the Southern stale* combined. WHY? because oair plants must please or
■we send your money back. Order now; it is time to act these plants in your sec
tion to get extra early cabbage, and they are the ones that sell for the most money.
WnR foT illuMratrrl catalogs* 1 . Wm.C.Geraiy Co.. Boi Ml Young's Island, s. r 4
y
The first question a man asks when
j he sees a girl flirting is whether she is
respectable or not; it raises a doubt at
once. This being the case no modest
girl can afford to indulge in the pas
time. When the down is brushed from
a peach its beauty is so marred that it
can never bo restored, and when a
young girl throws lightly aside that
I sweet and modest reserve so becoming
| to a maiden, and which so elevates her
S and enables her to command the respect
of all, she loses the great charm and
becomes rather cheap and common, to
use no rash terms. Flirting -may seem
to tho giddy and thoughtless girl won
derfully amusing and she may get the
idea that she is fascinating, but it is a
most degrading thing and she should be
frowned upon by evrey young lady who
has an ambition to become a worthy and
charming young woman.
tug Famous sunny south
BUGGY
/
per on the ground. One saw it and
picked it up, intending perhaps to re
turn it, but a glance at the eleancut an
gular hand writing induced him to read
it through, for publication, and, here it
in:
1. 1 don’t let a man smoke when he
walks or drives with me. If he knows
no better than to do it, I promptly tell
him what 1 think about it.
2. 1 don't give my photograph to
men, 1 used to occasionally, but 1 urn
wise now. 1 should hate bye and bye to
know that my face might be hanging
upon Tern, Dick or Harry’s room.
I!. 1 don’t let a man take my arm
when he walks with me. If Ho does 1
toll him 1 prefer him !o give me his
arm.
4. I don’t go out with a man just be
cause he asks me to. 1 like it better
if he asks another to go, too—his sister
for instance.
5. I don’t let any man “see me
home” from church. If ho hasn’t got
gumption to take me there and ^
like George Washington s whose smal*
likeness adorned his neck for forty
years; a wife like Martin Luther’s who
was greater to him than the wealth of
Croesus, and a helpmate like Tnomas
Hood’s, who acknowledged to her, “I
never wa3 anything until I know you.”
Reader.
EIG REMS MADE AT
THE BOWLING-ALLEY
The bowling alley has only been es
tablished in Milleclgeville aoout a
I month, but many experts at the game-
j have been developed during this time
and now there are half a dozen players
who have gone over the 300 mark an<F
some have approached the 395 score.
The sport is harmless in the opinion' of
all and the expreise afforded by the
game is very beneficial
The alley is conducted on the highest
possible plane and not aCbit of disorder
has been had since the place was start
ed up. Everybody knows the place is
located just across Wayne street from
The News office and it is a good place,
to go and spend an hour, getting inter
ested in the game, and forgetting the
business cares of tho <lay. Go to the
bowling alley and make a player of
yourself.
► ♦--»♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦«•■» ♦-»« ♦
i W. J.
Brake
i tMBKr
tm
/ ./V'n//
Are you considering a ouggy? Don’t buy before seeing my Famous Sun
ny South Buggy, fitted wiih my new Patent Springs. These springs make the
buggy ride easy, and easy riding means long wear. .Made to wear and testimo
nials from past purchasers prove our statement, that it is the best buggy made.
Another Attraction
Is our Patent Top and Curtains, patented by Mr. E. Becker, which makes
the buggy rain and wind proof. This is a special buggy, madelfor Southern trade
and cannot be purchased elsewhere. Inquiries answered promptly.
E. BECKER
MILLEDQEVILLE, QA.
sit through tHH'rvice with me, he cun
stav [away altogether.
6. I don’t let uny man give me u
present, unless it is something of a
trifling cost—like fruit or flowers,
7. I don’t encourage u man who is
not perfectly polite and agreeable to my
mother. Whoever calls on me sees a
good deal of her.
8. 1 don’t allow a caller to stay later
than ten o’clock. If he does not go at
that time I tell him politely that this is
my custom.
o o o
Likes and Dislikes.
Dear Editor. I’leaBe give one who
admires your Home Circle department
a little space to a subject not yet touch
ed upon:
Give mo a good, s-'ciul life, and not
a society life; a genial, natural pelson,
and not simply an affable one; a sensi
ble, popular maiden, and not a belle,
fw no man cares for such a wife whoso
heart has been trampled on like a navy-
yard.
Give me the woman who works with
a vim and never trie? to shirk her duty,
but whoso cry Is: "Can I do enough?”
and not; “Oh my! I have too much to
do!’, People who dwell so much on self
are genoially miserable.
Give mo tho woman who is willing to
adapt herself to circumstances, and who
after an exertion of efforts his such ari
undying faith, her motto is, "Though
may slay me, yet will J trust Him,”
The woman who will not be misei able
over the past, but will cling to the fu
ture with hope, for hope is the blossom
of happiness; the woman not afraid to
superintend her domestic affairs and
then grace her parlor with as much
dignity and confidence as if she were
the wife of tho President of the United
States; the woman who would cling to
her husband through thick and thin re
membering she took him for Detter or
worse:
In short, oh for the useful, helpful
woman strictly to duty wed who wil 1
cling to the cross, shake ofT daily bur
dens and remember life is very much as
we make it, and dispense in her path
way the balm of bitterness. Show me a
Ruth, and not a Delilah, and Esther and
not a Jezebel, a Dorcas and not a Queen
of Sheba, a Rebecca to fill the troughs
for the camels a Hannah to make a
coat, the Hebrew maid to prescribe for
Naaman, the female of Sarepta to pre
pare a meal for hungry Elijah and a
Lois to teach Timothy the Holy Scrip
tures’ a Queen Victoria in preference to
Cleopatra a Niobe to a Latona, a "Mot
her of Gracchi' to the Roman lady with
her casket of brillianJ jewels, a mother
* OX»TICIAN a
"See Yourself as Others See You”
In order to do this perhaps your eyes m‘i- ! help. The perfect eye is
the exception rather than the rule- Having taken a regular
course in Optics and being supplied with a complete and first-
class outfit, included in which is to be found nothing but the
best to bo had. 1 am in a position to off -r my services to the
public, guaranteeing to give perfect satisfaction or refund all
money received. Millodgeville nas always been and doubtless
always will be my home. Give me u tiial and you’ll find that I
can save you money; wilt not “fake” you, then Arab-liLic “pack
my tent und silently steal away.”
Office Over Goodman & F/ootfen’s
OFFICE HOURS: !) a. m. to 12—2 p. m. to 5 after March 1st, 1909
D. W. Brown-,
X3HA.IL.inn IKT
COFFINS AND CASKETS
Well Equipped in this Department and
Carry a Full and Complete Line
j
•’Phones: Nos. 65 and 2541
Southern Agriculturist
Nashville, tenh.
For 40 Years the Most Instructive and Entertaining
Paper for Southern Farm Families^
5(J Cents A Year One Copy Free
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