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THE Elms Bn
through ihr Mit!«Hj|rfvil«i j
"*c md'.-iAM mail mnUnr.
Baldwin County And The State Fair. HOW ABOUT A MATCH
GAME IN BOWLING?
Without much ado some go >d citizens of Baldwin county are working to
nuke an exhibit at 'he state lai r . In the country a tew farmers are putting '
All this week's n,u« | n I ,n s r >«r>e time makmz crops to be put on exhibition. In the city of!
e... inis HUK s news i ti I lie I * S t I 7 j The one place of amusement in Mtl-
Ntws and when you see it in Mtlledgevlle some enterprising business men are working the details of the i e ,Seville is the bowling alley conuuct-
matter,^getting ready for the fair. It is a movement that deserves well and ed by Mr Van Brunt in a splendid man-
should receive the consideration of every citizen of the country. Fairs are ner. Jt affords good exercise at a trifl-
educattve. They benefit the masses, for there are thousands who go to the | ln K expenditure and the recretation is
The News you know it’.s
Hint means reliability,
Best advertising medium In
Hits sect loin nt Georgia, largest
circulation in Baldwin county of
any papetl
J. C. MoAULIFFK, Kditor.
H. E. McAULlFFE, Associate.
ADVERTISING KATES: -Display
2o cents per inch. «t»n lal discounts for
time and space. Kcadiag notices five
cents ner line brevier, each insertion.
Subscription $1.00 I'er War
Clubbing Of'ers
For a limited time we offer to our
a I'wrihers the fol'owing inducements
an i they will be fully carr. si ntt-
The Nows and Southern Agricultur-
ist, both for $1.00.
Tne News ami Hr me an I Ki rm, < ne
jear for $1.25.
The News and Inlai <1 Farmer, weekly
fi r .n.r-o.
The News and Southern Cultivator
for $1.60.
'1 tie News and New York World 3 —
timer- a w< < k. for fl.75.
The News and Semi Weekly Atlanta
Jo irrial $1.75.
Iiirundgct in closer touch with their brothers. Fairs eliminate the feeling t 8omc 'hing different from mos. any
'other kind. It is considered quite
ol isolation that so often pervades a farmer's heart. It makes him feci that
the great commercial world is in sjmpathy with him and that it is only a
step which separates commercialism from agriculture.
Ot course, all ol us who are so fortunate as to knew the ups and downs
harmless be everybody and consequent
ly objectionable features are less nu
merous than in most other games.
Get up match and go over and get in
A SURE REMEDY
FOR HORSE COLIl
of this other iile really know that the farmer is as well situated to enjoy lile the game. It is not hard work, but it
as anjbody else outside the millionaires anil then there are some million - j t ** cei ' n K e, -uity and perseverance to
,, , learn how to win most of the time,
atres who would give millions to be simple farmers with such an easy con
science and have the peaceful, restful sleep that comes after a hard day’s
work has been finished. The worked needs lessons of this kind, it needs teach
ers to impress the importance ol co operation, of the necessity for mankind J
to regard with greater esteem the brothetkood of man in the struggle lor ex |
tstcrce. I '
There may be better ways to rlo this than in getting together and rx • Colic in horses is a very common dis-
, • (order. More valuable horses die every
changing ideas, but they arc not put into general practice. The exhibition j y ,. ar from colic than from any other
of prodttr ts enables the city man to see just wha' the farmers can do and | complaint, simply because they have not
neighbors can sec the products of adjoining farms and be better fixed to j ., trcate< * P ro I ,er 'y* Sloans Sure
' ‘ ° Colic Cure is a safe and sure remedy
for colic or tympanitis. It acts instant
ly on the stomach and bowels and gives
cope with conditions of the present. And in going to the city the folk from
the country can see the strides being made there and gam new inspiration
lor their work. This is a great country and the unity of the people in work
m :ans in i :'i for its advancement.
The Passing of The May Time.
Friday, May a 1, igog
Till FLOWER IN THE EUTTONIIOII
The w<>rl.l is fast getting free from fancies. The material side of human
nature is liecorn ng predominant 'I lie churches are uniting in one com-
attse and dogmas and doctrines, creeds and beliefs are not so far apart I wr j t es : -"A gentleman brought me his I
A prominent shipbuilder of Great
Britain said recently: 1 f a young mat'
in search of umploym *nt com m into my
olllee with a llower in hih lull mliolc, lie
stands no chance with tne. In mv busi
liesn llie'e is no room for the aesthete
and the dilettante,
kind of u fellow."
It would probably not be difficult f>
pr perly catalogue that employer. He
is tu t the sort of mau that the person
who (lnds life worth living would care to
work for. To Ibm “a primrose by the
r cer's brink" is jus'a piimroso, and
that's all. To him there is no yellow ot
beauty save that of gold —the mctu'li
gold that chinks in the till. To him
there is no appealing fragrance except
the smell of musty hank notes. To him
n bird mean* nothing more than a ere a
lure that may be trie I in li it grease
»tJeaten—if th) c >dt is n it too great.
GiiparJ and Old Scrooge were of like
kidney with him.
The man who can see n i beauty in
flowers, like him who has no music with
in himself, is tit for treasons, strnte-
gems and spoils —or whatever other
terms that may be used to express a
small, mean and sellish spirit. The
person who would wantonly destroy a
rose or a violet is lacking of the finer
Honsibiliti. s and unworthy of continence
The man who despises blooms i ne of
nature's most grate!ul compliments t"
mankind — has not u good and kind
heat t.
The young man who goes out with a
flowi r in his buttonhole and a song up,'
his l;i>s may not tie a money graldie .
hut he is more than apt to lie honest,
willing, faithful and of fair wit. 1:
is quite sure that he will he sympathetic
nton
ss they o ice were, liven nature itself ir falling subservient to the demands
of time. The seasons are blending into one endless time of pleasant weath
er. The winters are becoming mild, the springtime is no more gentle than
the <l.i>s we have in mid winter, the days of May, the happy middle ground,
are doomed and thcie is hardly a mirk between the Maying days and the
glorious days m June about winch *tis said Sir Launfal dreamed.
These May days would be mighty grand if we could have the showers
1 don't want that j that most always come to make the perfect June day. There is no reason
I why May should not be fruitful as weil as the June. The llower is as
essential as the fruit and no one should set greater value on,the one than on
the other, for what one tails in the other makes good. The coming o( the
June time and the passing of the May t'ays down in Georgia, however,
m in a great dea 1 to the people whether they be in country or city. The
w mdcrlul fruits and all the good things ol earth art here in June an I the
best tl ere is in ltle seems at its fullest measure then.
And here it means a good deal more than it most anywhere else. The
sweet gal graduates come along with June. They'll be- happy then and may
be it'll be the happiest day of hie lor lots ol 'em, lor not all of them will re
alize the fanciful dreams of youth which even the schoolgirl of this material
age will persist in dreaming. And despite the tact thet yon try to down it
with false doctrines ami submerge it with unsubstantiated teachings yet it
comes up serenely—this inborn glory of appreciation ot nature's best—and
everybody is obliged to see that June time is the greatest ot all times and
life without it would be like the year—have a missing link r an aching void
that never could be filled, no matter strenuous we might strive.
immediate relief.
Mr. J. Albert l’ahlman, Pocomoke
City, Mil., Writes: -‘‘Last Nrvenber
your Fever Remedy saved my Rercher-
on Stallion Jumbo. Hi 1 took sick on the
cars the first day out; and <>n may 31st
Sloan's Sure Colic Cure saved a line
work mare, but it took five hours to < o
it. it was a very bad case. I have
used it on a groat many horses for ledgeville
others and it always brings the results."
Dr. J. E. Neal of Plymouth, N. C., i Furniture Co,
The most highly refined and healthful
of baking powders. Its constant use
in almost every American household,
its sales all over the world, attest its
wonderful popularity and usefulness.
Messrs. S. 0. Williams, R. H. Woot-
ten, J. It. Harper and John Barrett
spent Monday Tuesday at Black Lake
on a fishing frolic.
Commencement pickles, olives and all
kinds of canned goods at C. E. Greene’s
Chick and hen feed at C. E. Greene’s
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 nest remedy for sick and ner
vous headaches. They make pure blood,
and strong nerves and build up your
health. Try them. 25c. at all druggists.
Make your porchesj
cool
Call on Mrs. Parker
for your Commence
ment hats, she carries
the latest and best line
of millinery in the city,
Shelf goods of all kind at C. E.
Greene's.
A new lot of jardineres at R. H
W ootten.'a
Commencement breakfast foods atC.
E. Greene’s.
VEGETABLES, fresh every day at
Barnes St Richter’s.
- If you want a good ice cream freezer
by using V ud or for a little money goto R. H. Wootten.
porch shades, we are
exclusive agent. Mil- I
Buggy—
Breakfast cereals at C. K
lioruo last Thursday night, lie had thi
colic proper. I give him Sloan's Sure I Maple syrup just received by
Colic Cure and in three hours l.e was all (-liter,
right." j
Send for Dr. Sloan's free book on I Hammocks for th > good old
horses, cattle, bogs and poultry. Ad-i time a., It. H. Wootten’s.
dress I)r. Earl S. Sloan's, 015 Albany
St., Boston, Mass., Station A.
Greene’s.
Barnes
Hams, fr *<li D ive Br in 1, the best at
Barnes anil Richter.
Standard Remington
Typewriter for sale at
a saciifico, apply to
THF NEWS OFFICE.
Pure hum*- mane lard f'M «ale by J. H.
Erwin at 1.2 eta. Ih.
The newest and
most up-to-date line
of hair goods always
to be found at Miss
Ellen Fox's. Chignons,
puffs and braid pom
padour rolls, hair nets
and hair ornamen s.
puffrs-and biaids made
from< combings.
CIIIINTY IIIMMISSI1INIKS oF
AGRICULTIM.
We are In favor of countv commission-
r.i of agriculture. The Farmers Union
. working to obtain them and if the
'•gnni.tution never does anything else
vide these commissioned- It means
agricultural independence and supre
macy for the farmers of Georgia
Tne farmers of th* state need help,
the) deserve it and sooner «•? later they
will got it.
i If we know anything it is about agri
culture and in this movement we see in
ii I succeeds ir. doing this then it will the future results of incomprehensible
in overlust.ng fame and deserved magnitude from which every line of
raise. The county school commission- business in the state ami indeed in the
and
wri
i rs is not more important than tin*
county comm:#.-oner of agriculture will
he The future of the nation depends
unon education and agricultural cduca-
worthy j lion will be i ne of tlie* paramount fea
tures. For a long number of years the
v ni'.ed States moved along without an
j agricultural diq nrtment. but today it is
I really one of ihetvost important branch-
t es of the federal government.
| From the work of the county agri-
They force the income tax through the ^ cu | tura | department much good will be
hound to come. Two grains of corn
Ih
r ready to pt rform
Savannah Nows.
rue ought to thunk ihcnutom
all these good loads.
smith,will derive imtsoasureiible benefit.
L *t us have the county agricultural
commissioners as sism as possible.
The supreme court has gone on record
MTIO
I dc*d*a to initrrn tl»* public Shut 1
have uww resumed the general practice
of medicine and all eal\» w*11 be prompt
ly attended. 1 can be f*und at my home
at nigibts, oral op o.‘fir*, in Horn*-Bldg.
orCul»cr& Raid's Dreg Store in the
day. f will give-special attention to fit
ting a$eotac!e* and eyi- glasses. Phone
209. CUYD< COMPTON, JX D.
Best line of Ham
mocks in the city, M i 1-
ledgeville Buggy —
Furniture Co,
Don't forget tlv* City Cafe if you
want something good to eat, conked
well and served pr*»perly. J. L. Boones
I’ropr.
Feanut butter and all good things for
hinch can be obtained from Barne* L
Richter.
!. CLINE, M. 0.
Practicin'.' Pliysi inn and
Si i rs/con.
Otiice Hours 10 a. m to 12 a. m.
Rpsidirce ’Phono No. 109.
Office in Hatcher's New Bldg.
M1LLEDGEV1LLE. .GA.
If You Own Any Farm
land, <*r know anybody who
docs, you ought to get in touch
with the steps farmers in all
parts of the country are taking
to protect themselves from some
of the commission men who
have been robbing them almost
ever since they were boys.
If you don’t own any, but want
the best short stories printed this
month, get the
JUNE EVERYBODY'S
P. H \CCOTTEN.
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* Sanford and D. s. Samord*
O. W. Brown
iJBAIJSn I TXT
beer.
rel ate and onto the senator#.
With a roof garden, the cosmopol
learh has been pul on Atlanta.
A < n road builder, tne automobile
the rock crusher boat to a frazzle.
The population of Atlanta now
siats of 125,000 people, exclusive of Elks.
Huins may study the code of ehiya.ry
for the next eight to sixteen years.
Th* baseball games scheduled to be
played here yesterday and today be
tween the University of Nasixlt'.e,
T tin., and the G. M. C. hul to be call
ed 3 T on ace aunt of t a r..
I will grow in future years where only j
dan one is growing today. The homes ot
I the farmers will be improved, the cat
tle will be finer, the barns full of pro-
I vender to insure home supply, the land
* l is will be planted in crop# adapted to the
I particular soil which may be found in dif-
1 ferent sections, fertilizers suited to
particular crops and peculiar soils will
Croqt ot sets at R. H. Wootten.'s
| STEAM BREAD always fresh at
I Barnes & Richter’s.
It you want g ioJs of quality call on
' C. E. Greene.
be used and in one year the farmers of |
< very county will gather increased crops
enough to pay fpr the work of the
I commissioner for ten years,
j Yes. we are ready to raise an active
campaign to help obtain the agricultural j
commissioners. We wish we could j
sound a c'arion call that could be heard
in every nook and comer, in all the out-
| of-the-wav places of the state, urging!
j the people to demand the state to pro-
Tho best broad in trwn, fresh every |
dav id. <ChandWr Urn.
1
kills Hor Foe of SO tears.
“The*most merciless enemy 1 had for j
j 20 years," dee-lares Mrs. James Duncan, j
ernment supervision of near- j 0 f Hajuiesvilk*. Me., "was Dyspepsia. 11
| suffered intensely after eating or drink- j
ing and could scarcely sleep. After
I many remedies had failed and several!
J doctors gave me up. I tried Electric j
i Bitters, which cured me completely.
I Now l can cut anything. 1 ars 70 vears
| old and am overjoyed to get my health
and strength back again." bor Indiges-
I tion, Loss of Appetite, Kidney Trouble,
' Lame Back, Female Complaints, its un-
equaled. Only 50c at all druggists.
We are selling the
Cluett-Peabody lineoF
shirts-the kind that s
advertised. Call
and see them. Bluoa-
I worth — Btembridge
;Co.
I 'Phone W. H. Montgomery, No. 55,
far your groceries and save money.
| Dill and sweet pickle just received in
bulk at Barnes & Richter’s.
COFFINS AND'CASKETS
Well Equipped in tins Department and
Carry a Full and Complete Line
’Phones: Nos. 65 and 254*
A Corking Story
of our Navv,by Robert Dunn,
the well-known war correspond
ent, with pictures by Reuter-
dahi., the man who threw such
a scare into the naval authorities
last year; six other fine stories
of assorted kinds; four arti
cles that mean things, two of
which were written for the spe
cial purpose of saving yon mon
ey j bright, crisp humor—all
hound in a stirring Memorial
Dav cover—that's the
JUNE EVERYBODY'S
R. H. VCOOTTEN.
me MiMeviiie BonKino 6omDanu
Has
received a
letter of congratulation
from “The Financier” of New
York, the largest banking newspaper
in the world. The Financier has compiled
its “Roll of Honor Banks.” approximately
there areTwelve Thousand State Banks
in the United States. The Milledge-
ville Banking Co., appears on
th9 “Roll of Honor” as
FOLLOWS:
| Commencement hams, breakfast ba
con, and everything else kept in a first
class grocery sto:e at C. E. Greene's.' Ifl U lilted SttltCS.
Ranks First in City,
! Ranks Sixteenth in State,
Ranks Two Hundred and Thirty-fourth