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Millinery
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ART NEEDLE WORK
MISS ELLEN EOX
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-THE HOME CIRCLE COLUMN,
la Pleasant Evening Revt-ri^l—A. Column Dedicated to
■it Tired Mothers as Thajp Join the Homo Circle at Evening
SAMUEL EVANS, SON & CO.
SOTTOMKOKERS ftHD WAREHOUSEMEN
Every Accommodation and Convenience for
Our Customers and the Trade.
HIGHEST PRICES' PAID FOR COTTON
Your Patronage Solicited.
WE
PAY
finest 6asH Price
- For all Kinds of
COW PEAS
run rnnii.-
Milledgeville,
Georgia.
MILLEDGEVILLE BRICK WORKS-
J. W McMILLAN, Propriktor, Milledgeville, Ga.
One Million Brick
jvjow in Stock.
%u
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Can fill all
made. Capacity-
orders can be filled immediately. Correspondence solicited.
11 orders at once with the best brick that can be Sj
y and output greatly increased, so that large
Tell jour hopeful thoughts to the
world, your discouragements to the
Lord.
ooo
Greet your friends with a smile; they
carry too many frowns in their own
hearts to be bothered with any of
yours.
ooo
Getting up in the morning and up
in the world both require more or less
self-denial.
ooo
We do not have enough music in the
home, Children who sing at their work
will hardly quarrel; and parents who
sing will find the burden of their task
grow lighter. There is rest and recrea
tion in music.
ooo
Good housekeeping has more to do
with domestic happiness than young
loves dream of. We believe these times
need women whose most beautiful work
will be done inside their own doors
without good housekeeping, the rom
ance will soon go out of marriage. No
matter what a girl’s accomplishments
may be, her education is incomplete i(
she has not some knowledge of balce-
ology, boil-ologv, roast-ology, stitch
ology and mend-ology. Even if she
should never be required to do the work
herself, she ought to know whether it
was done in a proper manner.
ooo
I True hospitality doos not consist in
j the mere fulfilment of social obliga
tions. It is a fur holier, nobler thing
j than this. It is the cordial, heartfel!
I welcome of a friend to our table and
rooftree, without counting the cost.
The lady of the house in former times
was true to the name as the dispenser of
bread. There was always room at her
table for an extra guest. The fare was
plainer than it is today, but the wel
come was cordial, the hospitality spon
taneous. It is an advantage to children
t> see guests frequently in this way.
No social training can take the place of
Tiie Famous Sunny ’South
B U G O \
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Are you considering a ouggy? Don’t buy before seeing my Fan ous Sun*
ny South H i-^_ry, fitted wiih my new Patent Sorings. These springs make the
buggy ride easy, and easy riding means long wear. Made to wear and estimo-
nials from past purchasers prove our statement, that it is the best buggy maJe.
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, madelfor Southern trade
and cannot be purchased elsewhere. Inquiries answered promptly.
E.BECKER
MILLEDGEVILLE, GA.
that which a child receives in the house
of parents who delight tc entertain
their friends Households, like individ
uals, become eccentric and narrow when
kept too closely to their family group
ooo
The scriptural injunction is, “Hus.
bands, love your wives,” and we’d add,
take pains to show it. Don’t wait un
til they are dead to give expression to
your love; be kind and good to them
now, while they can benefit by your
kindness, and while they so much need
it. These women don’t want posthum
ous praise; they want a few kind words
while the burdens of life are pressing
them. They may sing semetimes, “See
that my grave’s kept green,” but what
they are far more interested in is. that
the green grass of gratitude and the
bright blossoms of tender affection shall
spring up, through your influence, in
the paths they are treading, and in the
sphere they fill in your home.
ooo
Homs Happiness.
Probably nineteen-twentieths of the
happiness you will ever have you will
get at home. The independence that
comes to a man when his work is over,
and he feelp that ho lias run out of the
storm into the quiet harbor of home,
where he can rest in place with his fam
ily, is something real. It does not make
much difference whether you own your
house or own o le little room in that
house, you can make tlmt little room a
home to you. You can people it with
such sweet fancies that it will be fairly
luminous with their presence, and will I
be to you the very perfection of a home.
Against this home none of you should
ever transgress. You should always
treat each other with courtesy. It is
often not sodilficult to iove a person as
it is to be courteous to him. Courtesy
is of greater value, and a^moro royal
grace,-than some peoole seem to think.
If you will be courteous to each other
you will soon learn to love each other
wisely, profoundly, not to say lastingly,
than you ever did before.
ooo
Marriage.’
Ycb, she is your wife—that woman
who presides over your domestic af
fairs—legally so, at least; for you were
married in strict accordance with what
the civil law requiris in such cases, but
morally you can be a real husband to
her only in case you loye her. In other
words, while an outward compliance
with the statue makes marriage legal,
nothing can make it holy in the Lord’s
sight save the mutual and reciprocal
affection existing between the parties.
That is the first reason why it is so
necessary for huadands to love their
wives; asd tnis, of dourse, makes it
equally necessary for wives to love hus
bands.
In enforcing the duty of husbandly
love, wo remark, first, that this love is
due to the wife because of the trust
what she gives up in order to the con
summation of their wedded existende.
Did you ever think what it means when
and innocent, affectionate girl gives her
self to a man, to be his, only his, for
bettor or worse, till death shall separate
them? Talk of a leap in the -lark! Talk
of running a risk! Talk of sacrifices!
Here you have an instance of the-e
tl ingi which has hardly a parallel in aU
th l i • 1 man devotion. The girl
has a home. It lias been hers from
childhood. The has known scarcely
anything but happiness there. A dear,
precious home it is, sanctified b.y a fath
er’s authority and hallowed by a moth
er’s love. That is one thing she gives
up. The home, perchance, will still ex
ist; but it will not be hers any longer in
the sense it used to be. Her home
hereafter can only be such as that man
can provide.
Father and mother must likewise be
given up. In fact, the girl’s life, from
that moment, will present an entirely
different design. Formerly, the parents
were in the foreground of the picture;
now these are relegated to the back
ground. and her husband takes the first
place. For the marriage relation, wo
i must remember, is superior even to the
| filial relation in the Scriptur.l view of
■ the case. In fact, wedding bonds are
the most binding in which human beings
can be held.
OUR PRICES ONW
Building Material!
WILL SAVE YOU FROM
io to 20 Per Cent.
Lime, Cement, Plaster,
Doors, Sash. Blinds, Screen
Doors, Screen Sash, Mantels,
Grates, Tile, Paints, Varnish,
Glass, Building Material of
all kind. Our services are
prompt, Our material is the
best. Write for prices and
catalogue.
'll r
R. i Borne & 6o.
LONG DISTANCE t’HONE 473
037 33roacl St ATJOUSTA GA
F.ewmigMi—auiLM naiMaLMBIMl HWMCJflE gmidfimaiaiH asSSCHBBBBABMS
Southern Agriculturist
NASHVILLE, TKNN.
For 40 Years the Most Instructive and Entertaining
Paper for Southern Farm Families.
50 Cents A Year One Copy Free
Think, then, what a girl gives up when
she links hand with a man in forming
these bonds! What trust she reposes
in him! What a leap she takes, and
what a risk she runs-life, honor, hap
piness, everything is laid at his feetl
All, too, In most cases, ft»r love’s sweet,
sake, for it behooves us to remembor , ttni1 muBio complete for piano of organ
GOLD PLATED RING FREE
With Each Order for Old Time
Nona; Book at 10o.
52 dear old tunes we ill love, word*
for 10 cents. America, Annie Laurie,
Auld Lang Syne, Battle Hymn of the
Republic, Catch the Sunshine, Colum
bia, Cornin' Thro’ the Rye, Darling Nel
lie Gray, Dixie’s Land, Flag of tho
Free, Hail Columbia, Home, Swtiif
Home, Juanita, Lead Kindly Light,
Lilly Dale, Long ago, Marching Thro’
Georgia, Massa’s in the Cold Ground, My
Bonnie, My Maryland, Old Kentucky
Home, Old Black Joe, Rodin Adair,
Rocked in the Cradle of the Deep'
Swanee River, Sweet and Low, Blue
Bolls of Scotland, Last Rose of Summer,
Col. L Kenan returned Sunday from old Oaken Buckef, Star Spangled Ban-
that for a pure, young girl to marry for
any other motive than because hor heart
has already gone where her choice is go
ing, it a rare occurrence in countries
like our owfi. Such cases undoubtedly
occur sometimes, but they are excep
tional, the rule being that the girl weds
the man because she loves him; and the
further rule holding almost as gener
ally, that through the trials and vicis
situdes of future life she continues to
love him. This is the rule.
a ton days’ trip to Savannah and Mclm
ner, Vacant Chair, Those Evening
tosh county. He was engaged in each J Bell9# TramP( Tramp, Tramp, Uncle
place on several important legal mat-1 Ned, We’re Tenting Tonight, When the
ters.
Swallows Homeward Fly, and twenty
others for 10c, stamps or coin. For a
Among the distinguished visitors to short time we will send a gold plated
Milledgeville during the past week was finger ring FREE as a souvenir to each
Rev. Fletcher Walton, of Atlanta, who J one who sends a dime for the song
spent Sunday night and part of Monday
with Rev. Ford Mcree here. Mr. Wal
ton is one of the most distinguished
ministers in the Methodist church and
delivered the commencement sermon at
Weskeyan college last Sunday.
book. Send today to piano and Music
Co. Galesburg. 111.
it’s real estate, prices are al
ways right and terms easy with J. O.
Bloodworth.
THE ATLANTA DAILY GEORGIAN
...AND...
T0E MILLEDGEVILLE MS
Both one year for the Price of
One. Georgia’s Great Daily and
Your Home Paper, both
Or.e Year for - - - - y ni
i