Newspaper Page Text
THE MOTHER’S PROBLEM
<Or Uniting Strung, Healthy Girl*.
X serious problem which presents it
self to every mother with girls to raise,
tn these clays. The exigencies of school
life, the hurry anil routine of every-dav
duties, the artilieial environmert of
modern civilization, make It more
riillicult to raise strong, healthy girls
than ever in the history of the World.
Itoys raise themselves. Clive them
room, give them liberty, and they will
grow up healthy at least, without much
worrying. Hut tho girls present a ser
ious problem.
How many mothers there are who are
worrying about their daughters. Ner
vous, puny girls, with poor, capricious
appetites, bloodless, listless, a constant
anxiety to the mother. Ilow shall she
solve her problem? To whom shall she
turn for help? Each case Is inure or
less a study by itself, and cannot be
solved by any general rule.
This is the way one mother solved tho
problem. Mrs. Sebopfer, fitU) Prescott
Ave., St. Louis. Mo., in a lette r to l>r,
Hartman, says: "Sly daughter Alice,
four years of age, was a puny, sickly,
ailing child since she was born. 1 was
always doctoring her. When wo com
menced to use Peruna slio grew strong
and well."
Another mother, Mrs. Martha Mos3,
H. P. D. ft, Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin,
says: “Our little eight-year-old girl
had a bad cough, and was iu a general
run-down condition.” She had several
doctors, who could give tho child no ro-
-l;ef, and the mother no encouragement.
Finally, she got a bottle of Pertina
»nd commenced giving it to the child,
»nd it proved to lie just what sho
a ceded. When she commenced taking
Peruna the child hud to be carried.
Now the mother says she is playing
irmmd all the time.
Her closing words were: “Yon huvo
lone a great deal fi r her. She is the
>nly girl we have, and it ineaut lots to
is to have her cured.’*
These are samples of many lctior3
rlii.-ii Hr. Hurt ban la receiving, cum
in: straight from the hearts of loving
Bothers. While the different schools
if medicine are bickering and differing
is to tlusirics ntnl remedies, Peruna
toes right steadily on giving permanent
vlief. After ail. it i< cures that tho
teuplc want. Theories are ol I1IU3
ncouut.
Business Locals.
SALESMAN; —We are desirous of se
curing the services of an I
expert salesman on a salary of $100. j
and expenses per month. No one ex
cept a hustler who can give good ref -:
ence need apply. We offer the right
man a good contract. National Loan |
& Trust Company, Tifton, Ga.
BLOCKADED
Every Household in Milledgeville
Should Know How to Resist it-
The back aches because the kidneys
Co-operative Work
With Poultry
All kind of fruit and vegetables at C. j are blockaded.
E. Greene's.
Call on Mrs. Parker
for your Commence
ment hats, she carries
the latest and best line
of millinery in the city,
'Phone W. H. Montgomery, No. 55,
for your groceries and save money.
STEAM BREAD always fresh at
Barnes & Richter'*.
Fresh vegetables, at J. F. Bell’s Pure
Food Store.
If you want goods of quality call on
C. E. Greene.
Saturday we can show
you the famous Cluett
-Peabody brand o f
shirts and collars i n
latest styles.-B lood-
worth — Stembridge
Co.
Buy your ice from J. F. Bell’s Pure
Food Store. Prompt delivery, full
Weights, prices guaranteed.
Mrs. Parker will give
you the best style for
the least money. Call
on her for your hats
and she will guarantee
satisfaction.
Young Girls Are Victims,
of headache, as well as older women,
but all get quick relief and prompt cere
from Dr. King’s New Life Pills, the
world's ocst remedy for sick and ner
vous headaches. They make pure blood i
and strong nerves and build up your
health. Try them. 25c. at all druggists.
Help the kidneys with their work.
The back will ache no more.
Lots of proof that Doan's Kidney
Pills do this.
It’s the best proof, for it comes from
Milledgeville.
W. H. Leonard, 308 E. Hancock St.,
Milledgeville, Ga., says:’, 1 have used
Doan’s Kidney Pills and feel verv
greatful for the benefit I have derived
from thgir use. Some time ago I sent
for Doan’s Kidney Pills at Geo. D.
Case’s drug store and began taking
them. I was bothered a great deal by
the irregular passages of the kidney
secretions. One box of Doan’s Kidney
Pills entirely relieved me and proved so
satisfactory that I can recommend them
as a reliable remedy.”
For sale by all dealers. Pri(
cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Bu
New York, sole agents for the U
States.
Remember the name—Doan’s
take no other.
By a thorough study of poultry uni!
egg-prodin-1 ions, farmers all over tho
South ought to make u strong feature
of tills modern line of farm production,
'tow to greatly Increase egg-productlou
by better feeding and management is
easy to learn. Tho mildness 01 our clim
ate obviates the necessity of very expen
sive buildings and protection. Most farm
ers reduce the cost of production to the
lowest point by growing nil their feed on
the farm and by allowing free range to
their fowls. In the summer season, es
pecially, tills will very materially reduce
the cost of feeding. In woods and Holds
enough Insects and other vermin are gen
orally obtained to supply all tho expense
of a proteld, or meat, diet.
We need .also, to study organization
and advantages In marketing. Co-opera
tion for shipment In largo quantities
favors a reduction of rates. Uniformity
of lockages and high umtll'y of g.-ods
utso make for uniformly high prices. If
the farmers of a certain shipping station
will co-operate In this way, they can
Pure home made lard for sale by J. II.
1 nnis at 12 1.2 ct.s. lb.
TRAP FOR SALE.
One solenuid Columbus trap in first
class condition for sale. Rubber tires
and paint, good as new. Apply to
Dr. John P. Atkinson.
Hams, fresh Dove Brail, the best at
Karnes and Richter.
Lemons 15cts per dozen at J . H. Ennis.
McCall's magazine and
patterns tor sale by
Bloodworth—S t e m -
bridge Co-
FOR SALE.
Stylish bay horse weighing 1,050 lbs.
Combination horse, works anywhere
J.C. RICHARD,
State Sanitarium.
LOST- A gold cross and buckle. Find
er will please return *0.
W. R. Scarritt.
BUTTER Fresh creamery and country
butter kept in ice-cold refrigerators a
Barnes and Richter's.
Croquet sets at R, 11. Wootten’s.
CRACKERS, fresh lot just received
by Barnes & Richter.
Just received a fresh Shipment of
Lipton Teas all sizes Chandler Bros’.
Have you been to the show at the
Opera House yet?
Ice tea tumblers and pitchers at R.
H. Wootten’s.
VEGETABLES, fresh every day at
Barnes & Richter’s.
'Phone W. H. Montgomery, No. E5,
for your groceries and save money.
Seed Peanuts, Amber Cane and Ger
man Millet Seed at Chandler Bros’.
Fishing tackle of all kind at R. H.
Wootten's.
Coffee that invigorates —Bell’s Best
Roast, 2 lb tin 50c. Best ever sold in
Milledgeville for the price. Ask your
neighbor. J. F. Bell's Pure Food Store.
Ladies, don’t forget the big matinee
at the Opera House Saturday afternoon
at 3:30 P. M. price 10 & 20c.
We are sale agents for ”
Widow” Flour a high grade n
price flour. Reward offeted for bad
biscuit. Chandler Bros.
'Phone W, H Montgomery, No.
for your groceries and save money.
Breakfast cereals at C. E. Creel
Phone W. H. Montgomery, No. 65,
for your groceries and save money.
It. H. Wootten s-A11 housekeepers are
invited to visit It. II. Wootten’s and see
t’10 display af Rochester coffee percola
tors.
For vacation travel get
one of our suit cases.
They are very cheap,
from 75 cts. up,
Bloodwarth — S t e m-
bridge Co,
Hammocks for the Good old summer
time at R. 11. Wootten’s.
Shelf goods of all kind at C. E.
Greene’s.
Ferris delicious hams and bacon, fresh
from the packer every week. It cost
no more, whv not buy t.he best? J. F.
Bell’s Pure Food store.
Fresh vegetables of all kind and
fruits in season, aiwajs to be found at
Chandler Bros’.
They say the show at the Opera House
this week is gieat.
R. H. Wootten’s sells the famous uar-
bo-Magnetic raizor for $2.50, the only
razor tempered by electricity and the
only one guaranteed,
'Phone W. H. Montgomery, No. 55,
for your groceries and save money.
Not how cheap, but how good, prices
10-20 & 30c at the Opera House all this
week.
Newly Sacked Hulls, Meal, Bran,
Hay, Oats, Corn and Chicken Feed at
Chandler Bros’.
work up such u \v
'll-known
and
r«*ll
\ble
-eputntlon,
that their product*
will
al-
ways be strongly i
ompeted
or,
md
sold
at highest
market
price, o\
on
from
on
j board cars
j ln these
days, t
to host tr
•ule
In
comes hv
furnishing un uhs
)lUtt
iy f
•vsh
nrtlcle directly to
tho cons
jmo
r, or
at
least, to sp
eclal do
tiers In fr
psh
epg sup-
plies. Una
Bsorted
'Kgs mlxe
1 w
Uh
’ale
specimens
are no
longer li
rc
«dy
de-
J mnrid. Th
* best customers
rofr
r to
pny
moie nnd
know
hut they
nre
get
mg.
And this
dll he t
w tendon
sy more
and
n.ore In tho futvn
e.
Pure-Bred Poultry.
Special
Irtes of
poultry u
•o
ssumluK
huge proportions.
Millions t
f dt
liars
arc
1 Invested 1
t fancy
breeds i
nd
the
line
stork bus!
11CMM us
any one
mnj
see
by
glancing o
ver tho
lending f
inn
Jour
mils
of the coi
ntry. 1
lundrcds
>f t
tons
ind*
of dollars
nre spe
nt In nd\
ertl
dug
this
s t ock. N e
w breed
) nre hell
H C
malt
nt l>
developed
nnd put
on sale.
Other p
uiltrynu
n devote
tl
emsc
Ives
entirely to
coinmei
clul lines.
mid
run
e«K
y small farms »r in
Kant, now bring their o
1 Hear In pi
labor. Hon
y of friers n
Wliliiii tho lah( year or 1
cl; 1 business of shipping I
JuM hatch'd by the Inculmh
ivwf»nl
<\ make
it hIx to
> In hern
id prolll
They brhi
re shipped
1 ill a
I lie
exprei
hours
young el dolts should not
twenty-four hours from I
time utilized In getting
j Baseball TOtlaU
: Today and Saturday 3:30 p. m.
To Buy Advertised Things is to Buy
"Worm-While” minus!
The advertised things are t.ie ones that will
“stand the test” of publicity—of the spot
light. of comparison and close inspection.
Things that could not thus “pass muster
are not, usually, advertised—for it would,
most positively, NOT PAY to advertise
them. Read
Milledgeville
N E W S
A Scalded Eoy’s Shrieks
I horrified his grandmother, Mr«. Maria
j Taylor, of Nebo 4 Ky., who writes that,
1 when all thought he would die, Buck-
| len’s Arnica Salve wholly cured him.
j Infallible for Burns, Scalds, Cuts,
| Corns, Wounds. Bruises. Cures Fever-
* Sores, Boils, Skin Eruptions, Chilblains,
I Chapped Hands. Soon routs Files. 2Gc
I at all druggets.
Save wood, worry and servant hire by
using a three-burner Perfection oil
stove. For sale by K. H. Wootten’s.
o food for
hin a, thin
m to their
domination without tlu* trouble and ex-
poll ho of f coding. Some buyers think they
cun do hotter in thin way tlmn to buy
rett'ngs of eggs for new stock.
Money In Duck*.
Another Hpeclal lino which Iuib hoop
grea'ly developed of.late Ih tho produc
tion n«id wale of young ducks. A great
demand for thlH young poultry hnn neon
developed In high-grade restaurants and
hotelH In the Inrge chic* nnd at tho great
watering places or ttmnmer resorts. The
ducks are hatched by Incubator and ship
ped at from live to seven montliH old,
nd are used us broiler*.
One reason for tho luoreiisod demand
'0 ducks Is the superior met ho ls of
'ceding which now prevail. Only tho
choicest hut Inexpensive food Is given
hem. This gives superior flavor to their
IfRh which did not exist when duclcj
were allowed to feed mainly on fish uni
water vermin.
Duck farms of vast extent are being
leveloped In Dong Island to cater for the
New York market. One ranch, puts out
‘*.0,000 ducks evory year, and has con
tracts at a stipulated price, from one to
three years In advance. The price paid
for nice fat ducklings Is usually GO cents
a j»ound.
In old days no farmer thought of rais
ing ducks without an abundance of run
ning water. At present this Is not con
sidered at all necessary. Meat, and not
feathers, Is now the object. Homo parties
For Sale!
The Caraker house and lot on Wil
kinson St., most modern and up-to-date
property in the city, worth $5,000; this
property is offered for $4,000. Apply to
D. B. Saniord and D. S. Saniord-
Bloodworth-
Stembridge Co.
Invite^you to visit their store and ex
amine their splendid stock of Spring
and early Summer Goods,
r
Their goods are of the latest style, the
fabrics are most up-to-date.
It’s your opportunity at their store to
buy model merchandise in the dry
goods line.
Tru Mem and ^.convinced!
B!oodworth=
Stembridge Co.
Milledgeville, Ga.
also keep (luck.
Kunner (lurk Ih u
Iihh been called
dark family. Then
dure uh many tn
lay while eggs ai
far
ggs. The Indian
'ary prolific layer, and
he "Leghorn’ of the
duekH sometimes pro-
160 eggs a year, and
high in price.
A happy hen will make
master.
a happy
Do not overfeed the crowing chicks
or they may become Blunted.
Don’t wait until young poultry be
gin to droop and die before looking
for lice.
NIGHT COLLEGE.
The trustees o; the City college have
resolved to establish next fill! a night
college for bright boys who must work
In the daytime for a living. Jt is an
admirable innovation. The old-fash- I
loned American college course was laid I
nut upon the analogy of seven years |
In learning a tra..e. The student
When you have set all the eggs you
care to for the season, send ine
roosters to market. Their room Is
better than their company.
It Is a waste of time and power—
hen-power—to try to hatch eggs (hat
have realty been chilled by tuo hen
leaving the nest.
If the nest is too flat, the eggs are
sure to roll out from under the hen;
and if too deep, the eggs will pile
on top of each other and getbroken.
A Fighting Snake.
There is only one snake In tfn* far
east—1 lint is, India, Burma, Slam and
the Malay peninsula—that will always
nnd at nil (lines nttnek n man on sight.
That Is (he hamadryad, justly more
feared than any other animal that
crawls. Fortunately for mankind,
they are not common, except iu lim
ited districts. They nre so feared by
nil tlmt the native shikarrls or hunters
will go miles out of their wny to avoid
tile locality In which they nre known
to exist. The hamadryad will stalk a
man ns a tiger stalks his prey.—Med
ical Journal.
St. H.ltn*.
One of the rocks of tho Island of St.
Helena (tears a distinct resemblance to
the great Napoleon, so distinct. Indeed,
that In the old pre-Suoz days passen
gers on ships bound from India to
England were wont to crowd the decks ;
at sunset Iu the hope of catching a
glimpse of the marvelous likeness of j
the emperor whose facial contour used .
to npponr every evening clear cut !:i j
the Inst rays of the suu.
(♦00000000000000
♦ A JERSEY POEM, . 0
♦ O, yet good Jersey breeders who ♦
0 ore strictly up-to-date, 0
♦ Get out bovine tooth-brushes, 0
♦ and early morn and late 0
0 Clean up tho “toosies" of the ♦
♦ cows tho greatest in tho 0
O world, 4*
♦ Until they look like shining gems ♦-
♦ In a lass’s mouth impearl- 0
♦ cd! 0
♦ For the Jersey cow must take 0
4 the leud in this as other 0
0 things; ♦
♦ Bo clean and good and whole- ♦
♦ some—bovine angel with- *
4 out wings! ♦
♦ You’ve petted her and cared for ♦
♦ her tiil she’s a queen re- ♦
0 refined, 0
♦ Till she’s a gentle damsel, most ♦
♦ fastidious of her kind. ♦
♦ So keep her like her product, ♦
♦ the best and highest 0
<■ , brand— 0
0 The sweetest dairy lady that on 0
0 all fours walks the land! 0
Each average human being lias
about 15,010 square feet of skin to
look after and nearly ".000,000 oil nnd
sweat glands. The outer layer of skin
Is constantly w(siring off and must he
constantly removed to allow the now
skin beneath to form fresh, white and
beautiful.
0 0
0 We have copied the above 0
10 poem from the Jersey Bulletin; 0
1 0 it. was written by the Bulletin 0
0 Poet. 0
f 0
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Nothing better for kitchen than the
white enamel steel ware at R. H. Woot
ten’s.
0000000000000000>V0«0000 000
The faithful hen will stay with iter
eggs until fairly eaten alive with
mites. Do take time to give sitters
four years apprenticed to learning attention; keep lice down, if some-
to become a bachelor. Three years more
tie practiced wtmt he hud learned, like a
Journeyman in a trade, and then he was
a fully fledged master of arts "in course"
His four years In college allowed gener
ous vacations to teach in winter un
work In the Mayfield In summe
thing else must bo neglected.
When a hard shower comes up the
foolish young ducklings need atten
tion. I have known them to stand
r uno out ln ** ie ra * n l ,ea d s U P and
t'ndcr 1 tnouths open until they drowned.
aid
the modern point system, with , .» . . ....
of summer sessions, any bright boy can , ” ena have a wa y ° f Milling dls-
complele a college course In three years. I | mtPB ov ?'; a ne8t r ® iul *
One year more In residence gives him a | la "rambled «ggs. The hen that is
' master's degree, m a night college a ; K'ven a setting of choice^ eggs shou d
be set where there will be no trouble
... with other hens.
00000000000000 00 0/
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student can easily In four years, by re- j
citing two hours every evening for forty-
six weeks, present the equivalent of the | —
minimum college requirement, ny reclt- J xVhen irtv fowls got the egg-entln?
ing three hours mc’i night exeept Sat- habit. I find a dose of ovsfer shells
urd |V the minimum college requirements t n p e ,j, e "eggs act” remedy. Give
could te met within the college terms; them enoi'eh th-> f-* >|---> <-> enug"
or with r'gV cn’i’e- sejelo.-.s In th.-e- - them to gow themselvos. This has
years- New York World. cured some bad cases.
We have just received congratula
tions from the New York Finan-
eier, stating that we are now en
tered on the Roll of Honor, and
that out of 12,000 State Banks in
the United States less than 650
have attained this distinction.
We solicit your patronage. We
pay 4 per cent, on time sav
ings, compounded every six
months.
Merchants &
Farmers Bank
[no. T. Allen, Pres. L. C. Hall, Cashier
Jno. T. Day, Assistant Cashier.
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