The Milledgeville news. (Milledgeville, Ga.) 1901-19??, June 11, 1909, Image 3

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SAMUEL EVANS, SON HO. GOTTON* BROKERS AND WAREHOUSEMEN Every Accommodation and Convenience for Our Customers and the Trade. HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR COTTON Your Patronage Solicited. THE HOME CIRCLE COLUMN, i| Pleasant Evening Reveries—A Column Dedicated to Tired Mothers as They Join the Homo Circle at Evening ^ WE PAY flintiest Gash Price For all Kinds of COW PEAS ■iii men; Milledgeville, Georgia. In About Thirty Days j Woman was made out of the rib, I taken from the side of man; not. out of ; his head to rule him, but out of his side to be his equal, under his arm to be j protected, and near his heart to be lov- I Girls, listen to your mothers; you will never regret it. No matter what your | advantages are above what hers were, j you are no better. You can rest ^ssur- j ed that it is not hook learning or know- ' ledge of fashion that will keep your feet j away from the many pitfalls that she ' can warn you from, in a tender, loving ^ fashion, that you would do well to heed. No matter how mothers may speak, you may rest assured their hearts are in the right place, and that they want their daughters to bo innocent and good, rather than fashionable. .TBTL'T.’V'r- TT7HK GEORGIA KELT MATTRESS COMPANY will lie in * operation in Milledtreville and will be prepared to REN OVATE anti RE1U ll.h yonr old mattresses and make to measure GEXl’lNE FELT MATTRESSES. We guarantee satisfaction and it will pay you to wait and investigate our nletliods and prices. Yours very truly, The' Georgia Feit Mattress Company MILLEDGEVILLE BRICK WORKS- J. w McMlI.LAN, Proprietor, Miu.tncEvn.LE, Ga. One Million Brick jvgOw in Stock. ill Can fill all ord.rs 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. 8 ♦ j* , 8 If you would gather up all tender memories, all the lights and shades of the hearts, all banquetings and reunions, all filial, fraternal, paternal ai.d con jugal affections and you had only just four letters with which to spell out that I height and depth and length aud breadth and magnitude and.eternity of moaning, you would with streaming eyes, and trembling voice, and agitated hand, write it out in those four living capitals, H-O-M-E. o o o What a different world this would be if only all of us would cultivate the gram of good nature! It is the best tonic for nervoui disorders, the surest preservative of home happiness, and the most effective remedy for the divoicc disease now unhappily prevalent. He who has learned how to take even the most disagreeable things and grievous disappointments good naturedly may never be a millionaire, hut he will be what is much better, both happy and a source of happiness, and the atmosphere he carries with him will be like a bit of sunshine in the mammoth cave. tug Famous Sunny Soutn B U O O \ / Are you considering a ouggy? Don’t buy before seeing my Famous Sun* ny South Buggy, fitted wiih my new Patent Springs. 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 wina proof. This is a special buggy, madeifor Southern trade and cannot be purchased elsewhere. Inquiries answered promptly. E.BECKER MILLEDGEVILLE, GA. There is no earthly need of so much poverty and grumbling, as one hears on all sides today. There is plenty of food in this great and glorious world for all its people. It is the fault or education of our children; they are brought up wrong. The children should ho broken into some useful labor and taught to respect and honor the useful more than the ornamental. Every boy and girl should be made to work at something that would be ol profit, till the second nature forms with them. A man or woman so educated becomes actually fond of labor o«- at least pleased with re sults, then it becomes a pleasure to per form it. All children at an early age should have a hank and be taught to save its money, or. at best the larger part of it. They should not. bo allowed to w„ste anything, food, clothing, or any other article of value. It is the early impressions formed on the mind that are enduring. Very few children trained in the right direction will be come paupers, unless caused by sickness or some unavoidable accident. o o o One reason why some men do not get along better fn this world is because they have not the proper stimulant in their homes. Their homes lack those little touches or refinement which bring the best out of them. Neatness and taste are possible in the poorest homes, j Let a woman make the atmosphere as dainty as h >r mean; allow, and she will raise her husband to the same standard. And as she elevates him the effect, is felt upon herself, her children, her home, and her future. Some men re spond more slowly to the touch of a woman’s hand displayed in their homes and upon their surroundings. The task may seem hopeless to the wife at times. But sooner or later the effect will show itself. There is something in every man which responds to a higher and gentler influence.'JLet his home be rough and lie will be rough. But in fuse into that homo a softening touen, be it ever so simple, and the man feels it even though he may not directly no tice it. He imbibes it unconsciously, and its effect is sure upon him. ooo City Attractions. The illustration of the sea-bird drawn to its doom by the glure of the beacon light finds no truer prototype than in the case of the country girl lured from her home by dreams of fortune to bo realized in the great city. All ignorant of the wiles of evil as a mouse is of the mechanism of a tray, unsophisticated in the blandishment of sins; holding blank ly to the belief that sheep and goats never mingle she drops into the mael strom of a city existence as a snow flake settles into the river, “One mo ment white, then gone forever.” There lie in wait for innocence, the wide worlu over, a legion of plotting devils arrayed in livery of light, honest appearing ad vertisements that are tent hooks with which the devil angles for souls; em ployer" who scarcely take the pains to hide the fangs of wolves behind their smiling lips; boarding-house infested with other and more hideous vermin than the rat and the roach; companion ship of more fatal effect to the soul than hydrant water to the health; counsellors who spin viewless webs and plot ruin as the spider works destruction to the stupid fly. All these, and a great many more, pitfalls lie in the way of the country girls as she turns her light step from the cowslip and the green turf to take her place in the ranks of those who walk the path of daily toil OUR PRICES ON'f*T Building Material 1 MILL SAVE VO!' FROM io to 20 Per Cent. Lime, Cement, Blaster, 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. w R. J. Horne & 6o. LONG DISTANCE PHONE 473 CC7 Brood St ATTCVUSTA- GA jaBmawaj-aiauj gawwMBMBBMMignMWEiBB ik RED MEN FROM GOLD PLATED RING FREE ALL OLD OFFICERS With Each Order for Old Time Song Book at 10o. I 52 dear old tunes w& ill love, words At the regular election of officers of ^ m(Jsic comp , ete for pinno 0 ; organ, the Red Men held last Thursday night; for 1Q centg . America> Annie Ln „ ri e t all old officers were advanced, Mr. R. I AuW Lang Synr> Battl0 Hymn of tha , L. Wall succeeding Mr. J. H. Ennis as ! Republic, Catch the Sunshine. Colum- Sachem, Mr. Ennis becoming Past Thro’ the Rye, Darling Nel- Sachem. Mr. N. B. Ellison was made! Grayt Dixie . s Land> Plag of thJ Senior Sagamore, Mr. F. A. Hall Jun- Free, Hail Columbia, Home, Sweet ior Sagamore and so on through the Hoin6f j uanita) Uad Kindly Llgh% entire list Lilly Dale, Long ago, Marching Thro' The Red Men are preparing to give aeorgi|li Massa . s , n the Cold Ground( My some entertainment, or outing within My Marv , ail(J( 01d Kentucky tile next few weeks and the occasion will no doubt bo one of much pleasure to all as they will invite their friends. (Looking One’s Best. Home, Old Black Joe, Rodin Adair. Rocked in the Cradle of the Deep* Swanee River, Sweet and Low, Blue Bells of Scotland, Last Rose of Summer, Old Oaken Bucket, Star Spangled Ban ner, Vacant Chair, Those Evening It s a woman’s delight to look her. Bells, Tramp, Tramp, Tramp, Uncle bast but pimples, skin eruptions, sores, Nod> We .„ Tenting Tonight, When the and dojJh rob life of joy. Listen! Buck- len’s Arnica Salve cures them; makes ! SwallowB Homeward F| V. and twenty the skin soft, velvety. It glorifies theA ,th<,rs for 10c, stamps or coin. For a face. Cures Pimples, Sore Eyes, Cold Sores, Cracked Lips, ('happed Hands. Try it. Infallible for Piles. 25c at all druggists. A beautiful residence on Jefferson street for sale, most desirable section of town. Easy terms always. Blood worth & Bloodworth. short time we will send a gold plated finger ring FREE as a souvenir to each one who sends a dime for the song book. Send today to piano and Music Cj. Galesburg. 111. i»~If it’s real estate, prices are al ways right and terms easy with J. 0. Bloodworth. TYBEE EXCURSIONS VIA CENTRAL OF GEORGIA Central of Georgia Railway will sell ten-day tickets Milledgeville to Tybee and return, every Saturday, May 27th to August 21st, 1909 inclusive, at rate of $7.50. Summer excursion tickets will also be on sale to principal resorts in the United States and Canada. For further information call on A. D. Nesbit. Ticket Agent, or address J. C. Haile. General Passenger Agent, Sa vannah, Georgia. , * THE ATLANTA DAILY GEORGIAN ...AND... THE MILLEDGEVILLE DEVS Both one year for the Price of One. Georgia’s Great Dally and Your Home Paper, both Or.e Year for - - - " $1.50 k