The Milledgeville news. (Milledgeville, Ga.) 1901-19??, April 03, 1909, Image 6

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londay Night, April 12th, Illedgevllle Opera House nefit Nancy Hart Chapter D. A. R. The Laughable Farce Comedy “All a Mistake” TO BE REPEATED. id Used to Remove Remains of Capt. Beckcom (Revo lutionary Hero ) to City Cemetery. t Several New Features—IMav Greatly Improved. I'ocal and Orchestral Music Only Admission: 50, 35, and 25 Cents Howe & Co., ■i Augusta, Ga. MAKERSOF CLOTHES THAT FIT. —Don’t fail to consult us before buying a suit and you will be sat isfied with results. We have some elegant patterns just imported for the season trade. Our LEATH ER-SHADE BROWN is some thing attractive and our plaids can’t be beat. Other lines that are staple the year around. —We want your business and are willing to come after it. Drop us a line about ypur needs and we will see that you are supplied. Ev erybody knows us, if you don’t let’s get acquainted. Ti 1 ■Howe 6c C o, Augusta, Ga. Ain m it .'I.J «»>«•>• 1 I i! n* The Tonic Properties of Old Whiskey arc recojniUad by all physicians of standing—whiskey to be medicinally pure must be the real article—such a whiskey is Sunny Brook THE PUREfOOD ;* Whiskey It it distilled in the good old honest Kentucky way and its rare mellowness and richness o( flavor comes only irom years o( perfect arcing. Every bottle is sealed with the Government “Green Stamp** upon which is clearly printed the exact Age, Prvot sod Quantity of whiakey within each bottle. KUVE1ED DIRECT TO TOU EXMESS MENU BY ANY OF TNC FOLLOWING OIITUBUTEUt •“A ma». M. MADKSTttlN. i h.it.cccfToss, u G l)f MU, Mrr.. O.ttieccf.. Ton. • AI L SLY FAN. < h. tt.n-cf. Teen. thas, nv»» a ct».. j.rtwcTitt^ n. I'Ll lNt riM D A CO.. Jart.roMlIe, Fla r. r. Bt tl* a. j.ekwcMiw. n». D. F a ( T LONG Ysckfenvlfl.. Flo. «§ L»:VYBTFIN*fO. If Of If mrry.AU- L LOEB PUIFKK.Y CO.. I.,n>«il> ,l K.otgvwry. A'e Mow St Jack»eri«ItW. f le. >W I. | pide; who no nerdown od- without sip without br children un^* brave to li», . too sensikT A share of LAI | Bottle* $m y NU (Mss ^ M Bottles fmm ^1 Full Quarts ■% S By. or Boor boa Rg a true gen Mppag In pMo born. haf nWUMt. «M row wfa. — No goo4. ihjgfg C.O.P. — Valuable Poultry Points (HOME AND FARM) Lfnny farmers do not realize the 1m- IKirtance of the Incubator and the relation It bears to the profitable side of farm life. As a rule, the fanner regards the poultry only aa a ne cessary adjunct to the worries that he must necessarily have to under go, arid he pays hut little attention to the cost or profit of the flock. He does not stop to figure out what his hens cost or what they would pro duce if looked •after carefully. If one becomes broody, she some times is allowed to set for two or three weeks, and no effort Is made to break her up. If she Is expected to, hatch a brpori of the hens, and the loss from disease will which she should employ In la>- Ing eggs. Why not buy an Incubator and keep the hens laying? An Incubator will do the work of fifteen or twenty hens, nnrt do It well. It will cost no more to keep the lamp burning than It wilt to feed half the hens, and the chickens hatched will he Just as strong and healthy as those hatched by hens. They will he less trouble, and will cost less to feed than chicks that follow the hens, and the loss from disease will be far less. Every farmer should have an Incu bator since no special room Is need ed for them. Any outhouse will servo the purpose well, and while the ma chine is hatching the chicks the hens are turning out eggs at prices that mena a big profit. Incubators at one time were In a measure considered a luxury. Intend- d only for those who had plenty of money to spend on fads, hut In these progressive days those who keep hens find that they are a necessity If they expect to make money. Try an Incubator this year, atui you'll find that it 1s one of the necessities of farm life. The New Store With New Goods At New Prices Bloodworth-Stembrldoe Go. (Incorpor ated) Dry Goods, Furnishings, Shoes, Hats and Up-to-date Tailor Made Ciothing I What to Feed. A poultry keeper who has made a success of poultry tells us that itO per cent, of the food he gives his fowls Is whole oats. He says that he gives other grain occasionally ns a change, but that the I regular dally diet is composed of | whole oats, scattered In the straw, so thnt the fowls will have to scratch. He sows oats In the fall and at intervals In the spring, so tnal th" (owls will hang green food, and when convenient he4llows the oats to head out so mat the hens may gather the grain In the field. He says there Is no other grain that produces as many eggs and he en thuslastlcally says that the hens keep more vigorous on a diet of oats than on any dther ration. Oats are easily raised ar.d every farmer should give our friend's system a trial. Discard the Mongrels. Don’t try to make money keeping mongrel fowls. It cannot bn done. On the farm, wo usually forget the fowls, and If they live through the coal wluter months we go along and hatch out others In the spring to supply the table with fried chickens, never stopping to think that if we kept some pure breed that we could make a profit by setting them and other eggs. No one cares for mongrel chickens, and they are worth ouly what the market man will pay yon for them hut a flock of pure bred fowls Is al ways admired and If one Is for sale It will be worth many times more than a mongrel's market value, to say nothing of the value of eggs sold for hatching. If you have never kept pure bred fowls, begin now. and we do not hesitate to Bay that you will never regret the change. Hatch the Cricke Early. Early hatched chicks are always the best, and they give less trouble than those hatched later in the sen son. They art- not troubled with mites or gapes, and they grow rapid ly. 'Hie- 111alea, at two months old will sell at from six to eight dolla-s a dozen and more than pay for the cost of raising the females. The females will mature before fait and will begin to lay at a time when the old hens are in the midst of the moult. The Incubator solves the problem of hatching, as R can he started up at any season of the year February and March are the two lies' months for hatching, and chicks hatched during those months will In- earthly be the ones that produce a profit. Start up the Incubator now and so“ how case It Is to raise the early hatched chicks—and next fall you will that the early pullets will lay th first eggs. When one wants to start out on a large scale and have several thou sand laying hens at the end of the first year. It should he understood that It requires a great -ttsnl mor«| capital than the average poultrvnian is capable of figuring, or Is conserva tive enough to admit. Then, too, the treat expousc for feed and labor re quired to run that plan the first year, without any returns, will tend to so discourage the Investor, who cannot understand why hts manager's figures are not realised, and becoming dis gusted, calls the deal off, sells what he has for practically nothing, and then warns his friends to keep away from the chicken business. St Stephen's Episcopal Church. Rev. Wit. Russell Scarritt, D. D., Rector. Sunoay semceo — Morning Prayer and Sermon, il a. m. Sunday School. Friday Evening Prayer, 4 p.m. Holy Communion, the First Sunday in. the month. The Rector and his family will be at home to frinds each Monday might from 8 to 10 o'clock. OUR SPRING DRESS GOODS EXHIBIT The Newest, the Best, the Latest, the Cream of the Market, is found in our store. Prices to suit every purse, goods to suit every taste Fresh From the World’s Fashion Centres. Where the brightest brains have been at work designing the best weaves, ! the most fetching color combinations, means a harvest for our customers. Spring Hats, Shoes, Collars, Cuffs, Ties The leading brands of Hats, The Ralston, and other High Grade Shoes, the best in Collars, Cuffs and Ties. Bloodworth^ Stembridge Co. THE MILKMAN SHOULD ( BE A HEALTHY MAN — * « This ia Almost aa Import ant as a Healthy Cow for Health's Sake. Huving given u slight uccount of how «tn oUl-fuMtiloned dairyman beat all scientific modern mm at Chicago mak ing pure milk, let u:; look at the finan cial performer Of the new dispensation milk making. The Prairie Farmer au>a L)r. U. tl. Buttock, of the Bullock family, of Georgia, and a cousin of President Roosevelt, In making an ad dress before the International Tuber culosis Congress, (felled attention to the inn a supply, and declared thut while we are desirous of preventing The spread of tuberculosis, we should look out for oilier disease. There comes the lop- notch of what the bookmakers call di- leltantelsm. ns follows: "A cow,” he said, “should I*© kept as clean, or clean er. than an Individual, by being thor- uogt.ly bathed at left*, once or twice a week. Only the purest water should be given her to drink, for If allowed to drink from the Impure stream of the pas ture or from pools of water, she may in this way Infect the milk and thus car ry the germs of disease.' He further says: “The attendant dumb! not only be a hcnlthly Individual, free from disease of nose or throat, out should wear a suit of white and should have hands thoroughly wash cl before milking: tne udder of the cow should at every milking be thoroughly wash d. and all vessels Intended to receive the mttk should be thoroughly scoured. The stn»» where the cow is to be milked should be of cement finish and thorough- i ly cleaned before the milking process be- ji Sins.’ a Rmln of sense Into the sub- I Ject, the editor of <he above paper says * “this advice Is doubtless Rood, but for [ most dairymen Is more or less Imprac tical. When milkers as a class reach the point where they Invariably keep the staple clean, wash the cow's udder and i their hands before milking, we will have | made great progress. How many read- I era of the Prairie . armer do these things ’ now—' Well, we wonder. Suppose the reedev should rtgut now step Into the cow eta- I Me In the froaen regions of Michigan | Wisconsin. Vermont, or wherever tae • tow freoser solid to the floor when she | lies down on her uropplngs. and what I would he see* The flanke of the eewe j covered an Inch or more thick with nu- | sure that ft would not be practical to soak off until the weather moderates, when the farmer will be In good luck If be gets the frogen manure all out of the stable bef4|^Jhe ( _*Yoblne nest agate." DO TOU WANT TO GO TO COLLEGE? If eewe; (•s help you. W. have already sot kmadred, through colVge by bum of our plan. Writ# to-' day for full information regarding our offer of a { free ocholsrsbls ia aay school or cottage. Addrros I Robert J. Sherlock. Sf-41 East Hi Street. New I York CKy. We Beg to Announce The Arrival of Our New Spring Stock of Shoes and We In vite Your INSPECTION. r_„ . . The Famous Dorothy Dodd, *2 SO tor women, Zeijrler’s Latest Oxfords, Duttenhofer's Best, TO $4.50 $3.50 TO *6.00 Pnr Mon* Hanan’s Highest Grades, lUI mClI. The Great Walk-Ov ■ers, Our Line is Complete, Our Prices Lowest for Best Quality. -SEE US FOk SHOES FOR- Spring and Summer Wear. Fred tiaiiQ Shoe Go. 99 “My Young Sister writes Mrs. Mary Hudson, of Eastman, Miss., “took my advice, which was, to take Cardui. She was staying with me and waa in terrible misery, but Car- i helped her at once. TAKE CARDUI It WU1 Help You “ “tost spring,’’Mrs. Hudson continues, “I was in a rack of pain. The doctor did no good, so I began to take Cardui. The first dose helped me. Now 11 am in better health than in three years.” Every girl and woman needs Oardoi, to cure irregularity, falling. feelingajbead*ehe, backache and I similar female troubles. Cardui is salfc, reliable, scientific. Try Cardui. AT ALL DRUG STORKS