The Milledgeville news. (Milledgeville, Ga.) 1901-19??, June 25, 1909, Image 3

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SAMUEL EVANS, SON & CO. GOTTOfoBROKERS AND WAREHOUSEMEN Every Accommodation and Convenience for Our Customers and the Trade. HIGHEST PRICES. PAID FOR COTTON Your Patronage Solicited. WE PAY Hiotet cash Price For all Kinds of THE HOME CIRCLE COLUMN, R Pleasant. EveninP' Reveries—A Column Dedicated to ill Tired Mothers as They Join the Home Cxrolo at Evening COW PEAS Edwards Bottling forks BlTilED WILD 811." Milledgcville, Georgia. In About Thirty Days TT7HE GEORGIA FELT MATTRESS COMPANY will bo in *’ operation in Milledgeville and will be prepared to REN OVATE and REBUILD your old mattresses and make to measure GENUINE FELT MATTRESSES. We guarantee satisfaction and it will pay you to wait and investigate our methods and prices. Yours very truly, The' Georgia Felt Mattress Company MILLEDGCVILLE BR1GK WORKS- | J. W McMILLAN, Proprietor, Miu.edgevii.le, Ga. One Million Brick Now in Stock. y.' Vi & * Can fill all orders 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. ;s <rs* © Home. A happy home is the brightest soot on earth that the eye of God looka down upon. Love and peace in his home sends sunshine r round the man wherever he goes; disorder and trouble there is misery everywhere. There are few worries of life which a man cannot now and then shake off, but who can make himself free from the skeleton in [ the closet, from the worry of the house hold, a blister on the heart. A day will tell now many a man carried that with him without wincing down to the grave. When husband ar.d wife are helpmate to each other in the best sense; when order and love and goodness prevail in the house. Then the man who has a hard battle in life to fight can lea\e h;s struggles behind him when he enters there. With all our faults we are the most home loving of people and that is th > reason way we are the greatest of people. Whatever helps home life is a national blessing; what ever hurts home life is a national curse, and the great est curse that can touch these blessings is what would tamper with the peace and blessedness of our homes. ooo Faithful Laborers. There is one class of laborers who never strike and seldom complain. They get up at five o'clock in the morn ing und never get back to bed until ten or eleven o'clock at night; they work without ceasing the whole of that time, and receive no other emolument than food and the plainest kind of clothing; they understand something pf every branch of economy and labor, from finance to cooking; though harassed by a hundred responsibles, though driven and worried, though reproached and looked down upon they never revolt, and they cannot organize for their own protection. Not even sickness releases them from their posts. No sacrifice is deemed too great for them to make, and no incompetency in any branch of their work is excused. No essays, TUG Famous sunny soutn BUGGY / AKV ->—v- / ■ ■■• ,7 Are you considering a ouggv? Don’t buy, before seeing my Famoui Sun’!! ny South Buggy, fitted wiih my-new Patent Swings. 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, made!for Southern trade and cannot be purchased elsewhere. Inquiries answered promptly. TTbecker MILLEDGEVILLE, GA. / j books or poems are written in tribute to their steadfastness. They die irk the harness and are supplanted as quickly as may be. These are the housekeep ing wives of the laboring men. ooo A Plea For Tbe Housewife. It is extremely unpleasant for a sen sitive woman who, before marriage, had been earning her own living and had been accustomed to spending her income as she pleased, to ask a man for money to buy cver\ thing she needs, such as cotton, needles, pins, etc., etc. It »eems to us no more than right that a man should give his wife, for her own necessities, at least half as much money as ho would a servant. She keeps his house, provides for the comfort of him self and children, not for hire, but be cause she loves them, and she cares for her husband’s interests as no hired housekeeper would, and is she not en titled to pay for services! Yet some men would think it a hardship to pav a wife $2.00 per week —the amount he would be obliged to pay a servant girl. There is many a woman among the working classeB who would think herself highly favored if she were sure of fifty cents per week of her husbnnu’s wages to spend as she pleased. The above hints are for the husbands who need them, and written in consideration of their good wives. ooo Practical T o Men. The young man who is petted too much at home is seldom any goodl What is wanted now-a-days is a pra tieal man who can do something else besides smoke cigarettes and twist a cane. The time to learn to work and to learn business habits is in one’s youth. Ue who leans the life of a butterfly un til he is twenty-five or thirty years of age, and then recognizes the fact that he has made an ape of himself, has pre cious little to recommend him when he applies for a job. This may bo a chest nut, but it fits not a few young men in every city in the country. The boys on the farm are better off if they only know it, than thousands of the boys who are at large, wandering hither and thither, searching and looking for "rich bonanzas” to t irn up. There is nothing like being practical, and there is but ot e way to be so. Acquire business habits and train yourself to do good, honest, hard work. Don’t waste your time learning to tie a cravat. You can buy cravats already tied, ooo Good Morning. A cheery “Good morning” often sends a ray of sunshine streaming through the innermost recesses of a household, resting there all the livelong day, and again follows hastening foot steps into the mart of business, lighting up and brightening "the way of the world” as it goes; A hearty “Good night” often soothes many a troubled mind to rest, and heals the wounds which have either come anew to a strug gling soul, or been re-opened by the harsh words or at-cds that are spoken or done in st ason or out of “eason, au the daily battle of our life progresses. “Good morning,” with a heartful wish for blessings in the tone of its utter ance, cheers the peart of faint and fee i - ful ones, a: d sc.:t :ne many a hand spot that has place by inheritance or cultiv ation, in the brei st3 of humanity. The love-light, that beams from the eye when one i» greeted by such words a- "Good night lights ma.iy a weary spirit to a chamber of res'. and peace and to a land of pleat; nt dreams. The home where "Good morning” and “Good night” are carefuliy said by one to another, are the, homes of the world where gt od thoughts are gener ated, where pood deeds have place, ano from whence go out good lives. Then don’t forget to say “Good morn ing^” say it to parents, to children, brothers, sisters, schoolmates, teach era, friends and to *11 you meet, ani say it cheerfully and a smile It will do you goi-d and do your friends good. It will cheer the discouraged, rest tin tired ones, rrd somehow makes the wheel of lift wove more smoothly. A • Good morm g* heartily spoken mnkes hope frez-her and brighter and seer • OUR PRICES ONW“ Building Material 1 WILL SAVE YOU FitOMr io to 20 Per Cent. aroMncng YaSKaKacsaimErumsr*: wmuaam'BBBBOL. 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, W R. J. Horne & Go. LONG DISTANCE x’HONE 473 007 Broad St ATTCS-tTSTA G A outhern Agriculturist MA8IIVILLE, TEXN. For 40 Years the Most Instructive and Entertaining Paper for Southern Farm Families. 50 Cents A Year One Copy Free really to make the morning good, and to be a prophesy of a good day to come after it. 2fijba. sugar $1.00. W. H. Montgomery. Vudor porch shades make cool porches this hot weather. Come to us for them. Milledge ville Buggy & Furni- tore Co. Up the river. Down the lake. Town Talk Flour Takes the Cake. 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 \yill 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. A beautiful residence on Jefferson street for sale, most desirable section of town. Easy terms always. Blood worth & Bloodworth. WHERE OCEAN BREEZES BLOW. EXCURSION RATES VIA (entrain Georgia Railway QUICK AND CONVENIENT SCHEDULES. SPLENDID SERVICE FROM PLACES If) GEORGIA AND ALABAMA. ASK YOUR NEAREST TICKET AGENT FOR TOTAL RATES SCHEDULES, ETC.