The Milledgeville news. (Milledgeville, Ga.) 1901-19??, April 24, 1909, Image 7
jj Millinery f
THE HOME CIRCLE COLUMN.
-AI\D
ART NEEDLE WORK
MISS ELLEN FOX ’ \
SfUfJ? WW 'W'W 'WWW'
11 Pleaoant Evening Reveries—A. Column Dedicated to
j |^^Tired*Motherg as They Join the Homo Circle at Evening jjj
SAMUEL EVANS, SON & GO.
GOTTOMRORfRS AND WAREHOUSEMEN
Every Accommodation and Convenience for
Our Customers and the Trade.
HIGHEST PRICES'. PAID FOR COTTON
Your Patronage Solicited.
WE
PAY
Hlflhest Gash Prise
For all Kinds of
COW PEAS
B.1ILED 10 CUT."
Edwards Bottling forts
Milledgeville,
Georgia
M1LLEDGHVIL.LE BRI6K WORKS-
J. W McMILLAff* Proprietor, Milledgevilue, Ga.
Before it is Too hate.
“If you’ve a Kray-haired mother
In the old home far away,
Sit down and write the letter
You put off day by day.
Don’t wait until her tired steps
Reached Heaven’s pearly gate,
But show her that you think of her
Before it is too late.
If you’ve a tender message
Or a loving word to say.
Don’t wait till you’ve forgot if,
But whisper it today.
Who knows what bitter memories
May haunt you if you wait?
So make your loved one happy
Before it is too late.
The tender words unspoken,
The letters never sent
The long forgotten messages,
The wealth of love unspent,—
For these some hearts are breaking,
For these some loved ones wait;
So show them that you care for them
Before it is too late.
o o o
One lone thought spoken is worth
two unsaid.
o o o
A girl never marries her ideal. 0"e
reason is that she seldom finds him, and 1
when she does she doesn't like him.
o o o
Better simple food with pleasure then
luxuries with annoyance and worry,
o o e
There is a difference in “intelligent”'
One Million Brick
jsjow in Stock.
* *
*
*'■*’ Can fill all orders at once with the best brick that ua be
made. Capacity and output greatly increased, so that large
orders can be filled immediately. Correspondence so hotted.
dressing and philosophical dressing.
The first is to keep your dress up with
fashionable fads, and the latter is to
keep your pocketbook up with your
dress.
o o o
Right here is the secret of awkward-
* ness It is self-consciousness. A girl
who thinks about how she is going to
look when she extends her hand will
hold it out as stiff as a pump handle.
If she is worried about the appearance
of her walk she will stalk over the land-
The Famous Sunny south
B U O O \
/
‘ Are you considering a ouggy? Don’t buy before seeing my Famous Sun
ny South Buggy, fitted wim 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 wind proof. This is a special buggy, madeifor Southern trade
and cannot be purchased elsewhere. Inquiries answered promptly.
E. BECKER II
MILLEDQEVILLE, GA.
scape like a wooden dummy. What a
person does gracefully is done uncon
sciously. So if a person would learn
grace she must first learn how to do
things unconsciously and she can only
learn to do things unconsciously by do
ing them often. .
ooo
Cherish Tour Girlhood.
Dear girls, don’t be so often wishing
vou were grown up to women that vou
will neglect your girlhood. In a rush
and hun y of these fast times, there is
danger that you will reach ar.d strain
after * young ladyhood” too much Ba
girls awhile yet-tender, joyous, loving,
obedient and industrious. Womanhood,
with its privileges and power, its bur
dens and its trials, will come soon
enough. On this point one has said:
“Wait patiently, my children, through
the Whole limit of your girlhood, Go
not after womanhood; let it como to
you. Keep out of public view. Culti
vate refinement and modesty. The
cares and responsibilities of life will
come soon enough. When they come,
you will meet them, I trust, as true
women should. But, oh, be not. so un
wise as to throw away your girlhood.
Rob not yourself of this beautiful sea'
son which, wisely spent, will brighten
all your future life.
ooo
Not Overwork.
Numberless men, alleged to be hurt
by overwork, do not work half enough.
Their tioublo comes from superabund
ance of leisure and activity. They
yawn through three of four hours in
the office or counting room; are too in
dolent to walk up town; eat too heavy
and rich a dinner; go out afterwards to
aee merchants, bankers and the like,
and join boon companions who walk
around billiard tables or sit at cards,
ar.d keep very thirsty until the drowBy
steeples toll two and three. This is
overwork, but overwork in the wrong
direction, and of a very different kind
from that supposed. Overwork covers
a multitude of bad habits; it it made a
scapegoat for countless transgressions,
it is very often a shallow pretense, a
miserable shum. While there are far
too many who overwork, there are a
great many that break down and kill
themselves by laziness, self indulgenee
and dissipation. Very decidedly, over
work iB overdone. '
o n n
Appreciate Your Mother.
The graveyards are full of mothers
who died taking care of their children.
Better appreciate your mother before
your appreciation of her will be no kind
ness to her and the post mortem regrets
will be more and more of an agony as
the vesrs pass on. Big headstones of
polished Aberdeen and the best epitaphs
which the family nut together could
compose and a garland of whitest roses
from the conservatoy are often tho at
tempt toattonc for tho thanks we ought
to have uttered in living ears and the
kind works that would have done more
good than all the calla lilies ever piled
up on the silent mounds of the ceme
teries. The world makes applauditory
ado over the work of mothers who have
raised boys to be great men and most of
our readers could ;turn to their books
and find the names of fifty distinguish
ed men who had great mothers—Cuvi
er’s mother. Walter Scott’s mother,
St. Bernad.s mother, Benjamin West's
mother. But who praises mothers or
what they do for daughters who make
the homes of this land. We do not
know of an instance of such recognition.
You never hear a work in appreciation
of the self denial, of the fatigues and
good sense and prayers which those
mothers go through who navigate a
family of girls from the edge of the
cradle to the schoolhou-e door and from
the Bchoolhouse door up to the marriage
altar. That is an achievement which
the eternal God celebrates high up in
the heavens, though for it human hands
so seldom clap the faintest applause.
My! Myl What a time that mother had
with thoae youngsters, and if she had
relaxed care and work and advice and
solicitation of heavenly help that next
generation would have landed in the
poor house idot asylum or penitentiary.
It is while she is living but never while
she is deed, that some girls call their
mother “maternal ancestors” or “the
old woman.”
Per BuMrig Material
•An
Lime, Cement, Plaster,
Doors, Sash. Blinds, Screen
\ *1*
Doors, Screen Sash, Mantel
Grates, Tile, Paints, Varnish,
Glass, Building Material of
all kind. Our services are
prompt, Our material is the
best. Write for prices and
catalogue.
• ir
R. J. Horne & 60.
LONG DISTANCF, PHONE 473’ --
057 Broad St AUGUSTA G A
1
Southern Agriculturist
NISIIVILlE, TEN If.
For 40 Years the Most Instrnctlve and Entertaining
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ms—l
DOCTOR KING'
| TUI 111 KUMLE00CT0IS. DIREST II ME Ml LDDDEST LOCATED. ffiOILAI OIAMATES IR WHOM.
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DR. KING MEDICAL CO., 7 “atlanta, 1 ca. 1
(Thoroughly reepouslhle. loyally incorporated mder the la«> t of Georgia.) •
UaKrjsgaacs ? ». - S v.-. — -- rxwKxsci
HOGLESS LARD
It is a recognized fact that no
“Snowdrift” user ever uses any
other cooking-fat, for “Snowdrift”
— the Standard of quality— is
purity itself, made by Nature in
the green fields of the Sunny
South. The top-most grade of
cotton seed oil refined by our
original Wesson process. No
hog-lard in it. Wholesome, eco
nomical, digestible, healthful. As
good as butter for all cooking
purposes, and much cheaper.
IVTHE • SOUTHERN • COTTON • OIL • CO •, •
..Aew York Suva nonhMtla nta 'AewOrUan&Chiawoj