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Millinery
-AND-
ART NEEDLE WORK
MISS ELLEN EOX
THE HOME CIRCLE COLUMN.
,S 1
Pleasant Evening Reveries—A Column Dedioated to I
^ Tired Mothers as They Join the Home Circle at Evening ^
SAMUEL EVANS, SON & CO.
GOTrOit BROKERS AND WAREHOUSEMEN
Every Accommodation and Convenience for
Our Customers and the Trade.
HIGHEST PRICES. PAID FOR COTTON
Your Patronage Solicited.
WE
PAY
Hipest Gash Price
For all Kinds of
COW PEAS
Edwards Bottling Works
B’TlLED 10 MI
Millcdgeville,
Georgia*
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I MILLEDGEVILLE BRICK WORKS-
m
g J. W McMILLAN, Proprietor, Miu.edgevu.le, Ga.
One Million Brick
N
ow 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.
Home Love the Eest.
We think home love is the best. The
love that you are born to'is the sweet
est that you will ever have on earth.
You, who are anxious to escape from
the home nest, pause a moment and re
member that this is so. It is right that
the hour should come when you in your
time should become a wife and mother
and give the best love to others, but
that will be just it. Nobody, not a
husband, will ever be so tender or so
true as vour father or mother. Never
again after strangers havp broken the
beautiful bond, will there be anything
so sweet as the little home circle of
mother, father and children, where you
were cherished, praised, protected and
kept from harm. You may not know
it now but you will know it some day.
Whomsoever you marry, true and good
thohe mav be, will, after the love days
are over and the honeymoon has waned,
give you only what you deservo of love
of sympathy, and usually much less,
never mure.
o o o
A Hap:y Woman.
Is she not the very sparkle and sun
shine of life?—A woman who is happv
because she can’t help it, whose smiles
even the coldest sprinkle of misfortune
cannot dampen. Men make a terrible
mistake when they marry for beauty,
for talents, or for style. The sweetest
wives ure those who possess the magic
secret of being contented under anv
circutmtances. Rich or poor, high or
low, makes no difference; the bright
little fountain of joy bubbles up just
as musically in their hearts. Do they
live in a log cabin, the fire that leaps
upon its humble hearth become* bright
er than the gilded chanlcliers in an
Aladdin palace. Where is the stream
of life so dark and unproportious that
the sunshine of a happy face falling on
the turbid tide will not waken an an
swering gleam? Why, these joyful,
good-tempered people don’t know half
the good they do.
The Famous Sunny South
B U G G N
/
.V
Are you considering a ouggy? Don’t buy before seeing my Famous Sun
ny South Buggy, fitted wiih my new Patent Sorings. 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 wintf proof. This is a special buggy, madeifor Southern trade
and cannot be purchased elsewhere. Inquiries answered promptly.
E.BECKER
MILLEDGEVILLE, GA.
H+4
It is difficult for a vvoman who has
led an active life as housekeeper to be
come a passive member of her son’s or
daughter,s home. She likes her old
way best, she longs to show the young
er generation how they are wasting
their resources. Youth will learn only
by experience, It resent* interference.
And so there are misunderstandings,and
unhappiness results. A woman is al
ways happier in her own home with her
own income, however small it may be,
than in the home of another, even of
her own son and daughter, though it be
a home of wealth and lavish, generosity
where there is an earnest desire to make
her comfortable and happy.
ooo
A mother is truly our guardian spir
it upon earth; her goodness shielus an 1
protects; she walks with our infancy
our youth and maturing age, even shel
tering us with her absolving love, and j
expiating our many sins with her bless
ed prayers. And when our mother,
with all her burden of love, her angelic
inlluence, her saintly care, ceases her
beauteous life, how much we lose of
home, of happiness, of heaven’ no one
can reckon; our mother was none but
ours, and we only can know how holy
she was, how sacred her memory must
he.
ooo
Old age should be well fed. well dress
ed well housed, free from the worries
of life and the discomforts. It should
be placid and gentle and beautiful. The
heart free from cure und the body free
from labor, the mind should expand and i
the aged should become a source of
moral strength and wisdom to all about
them. The old folks should be cared
for and honored, and above all they
shou'd be allowed to have their room
and their will, for assuredly they have
long enough to know what they want,
ooo
If you wish your children to be re
spectful to you, then you should be re
spectful to them. The boys and girls
who are spoken to in u harsh, rough
toie of voice naturally fall into the
habit of responding in the same way.
Parental dignity and authority may
be asserted with the utmost firmness,
and yet without coarseness or arro
gance. In fact it cannot be well assert
ed in any other way. A rude father or
mother is likely to have rude sons and
d iughters.
ooo
There is sweet music in every home
where the heart strings are touched by
gentleness and courtesy. The mild
word, the gentle answer, the tender
act, the patient considerateness, will
touch chords of kindness and make
sweet melody in the family as every
where. A desolate, dreary place is a
home devoid of those little courtesies
wlr'ch are practiced in the best social
life.
ooo
It is a littlp thing to show your wife
how dear she is to ycu, to offer manly,
lover- like sympathy and help when she
is worn out with the day’s cares. Yet
these little things go far to make the
home a nest of happiness and to keep
the wife what Bhe was in the sunny
day’s of courtship.
ooo
To give children good instruction’ and
a bad example is but beckoning to
them with the head to show them the
way to Heaven, while you take them by
the hand lead them to perdition.
We have left a small quanity of Burt
Seed Oats and Ga Rye for late plant
ing. Chandler Bros.
DR. P. W. WOLF, D/0.
Eyesight Specialist
“Olaasea Bight Good Sight."
‘•NTJPF SAID."
At Mrs. Julia Parker’s Milliners
Store, MilledgeTillt' Ga.,
SAT. ATBIt. 10th, 1909
Per Building material
Lime, Cement, Plaster,
Doors, Sash. Blinds, Screen
Doors, Screen Sash, Mantels,
Grates, Tile, Paints, Varnish,
Cilass, Building Material of
all kind. Our services are
prompt, Our material is the
best. Write for prices and
catalogue.
'flff
R. J. Horne & Go.
LONG DISTANCE PHONE 473
007 Ili-oncl St AUGUSTA GA
CAN YOU SEE AS ”VV". J-
Brake
YOU ARE SEEN?
f OPTIOIAW i
‘‘See Yourself as Others See You"
In order to do this perhaps your eyes need 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 hut the
best to be had. 1 am in a position to offer my services to the
public, guaranteeing to give perfect satisfaction or refund all
money received. Millcdgeville has always been and doubtless
always will be my home. Give me a trial and you’ll find that I
can save you money; will not “fake’’ you, then Arab-like “pack
my tent and silently steal away.”
Office Over Goodman & Men's
OFFICE HOURS: !) a. m. to 12—2 p. m. to G after March 1st, 1909
Southern
NASHVILLE, TEN.V.
For 40 Years the Most Instructive anil Entertaining
Paper for Southern Farm Famines.
50 Cents A Year One Copy Free
♦♦fttT