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SAMUEL EVANS, - SON & CO.
OOTTONiBKOKERS AND WAREHOUSEMEN
Every Accommodation and Convenience for
Our Customers and the Trade.
HIGHEST PRICES' PAID FOR COTTON
Your Patronage Solicited.
Woman’s Friend
Nearly all women suffer at times from female
I ailments. Some women suffer more acutely and
I more constantly than others. Hut whether you have
little pain or whether you suffer intensely, you
should take Wine of Cardin and get relief.
Cardui is a safe, natural medicine, for women,
prepared scientifically from harmless vegetable in- j
gredients. It acts easily on the female organs and I
gives strength and tone to the whole system.
THE HOME CIRCLE COLUMN,
Pleasant Evening Reveries—A Column Dedicated to
Tired Mothers as They Join the Homo Circle at Evening
vnena-Tirr-.var,
Women have exercised a remarkable
judgment in regard to great issues.
They have prevented the casting aside
of plans thit led to very remarkable
discoveries and inventions. When Col
umbus laid a plan to discover the new
world, he could not get a hearing till
he applied to a woman for help. Wo
man equips man for the voyage of life.
She is s ddom a leader in any project,
but meets her peculiar and best alti
tudes as a helper. Though man exe
cutes a project, she fits him for it, be
ginning in his chil Ihood. A man dis-
these premises. A home without child
ren is like a garden and no flower?,
We want to be tired, to bo vexed, to be
run over, to hear children at work with '
all its varieties.
\
009
The Christian Mother.
Now, suppose Christ should come in
to your house. First the wife and the
mother would feel His presence. Re
ligion almost alwa> s begins there. It
is easier for women to become Chris
tians than for us men, They do not
l
covered America, tut a woman equipp-1 80 gainst God. If women tempt
ed man originally away from holiness, I
now she tempts him back. She may j
not make any fuss about it, but some
how everybody in tfie house knows that
there is a change in the wife and moth
er. She chides the children more gent
ly. Her face lights up sometimes with j
ed the voyage; so everywhere, manoxe
J cutes the performance, but woman
I trains the man.
Children.
j Woe to him that smiles not over a
cradle, or weeps over a tomb. He who
an unearthly glow. She goes into some
OUR PRICES ON-*T
Building Material 1
W ILL SAVE YOT FROM
10 to 20 Per Cent.
,> it, „
Lime, Cement, Piaster,
Doors, S.tsh. H'.inds, 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
The Woman’s Tonic
J 38
Mr?. Verna Wallace, of Sanger, Tex., tried Cardui. She writes;
I “Cardui lias done more for me than 1 can describe. Last spring 1
was taken with female inllarnmation and consulted a doctor, hut to 1
no avail, so I took Cardui, and inside of three davs, I was able to do j
I iny housework. Since then my trouble has never returned.” Try it.
AT ALL DRUG STORES
1 l' as never trieil the companionship of a | unoccupied room for a little while, and |
the husban 1 goes not after her nflr asks
her why she was there. He knows
without asking that she has been pray
ing. The husband notices that her face
is brighter than on the days when years
ago, tljey stood at the marriage altar,
little child, has carelessly passed by
one of the greatest pleasures of life, as
one uassess a rare flower without pluck-
1 ing it or knowing its value. And to
, you whose homes are blessed witli the
little prattlers, have patience and enjoy
j the its while you may. They will n °t j an j h e knowsi that Jesus has been put-
| trouble you long. Children grow up- ting upon her brow a wreath sweeter
[nothing on earth grows -o fast as child- | lhftn tho orang(! blossoms. She puts
the children to bed, not satisfied, with
■a*#*****.*
I M1LLEDGEVILLE BRIGK WORKS- I
j. w McMlLI.AN, Proprietor, Mu.ledgeville, Ga.
* #
One Million Brick
Now in Stock.
* 1
Can fill all orders at once with the best brick tnat can be
made. Capacity and output greatly increased, so that large
orders can be filled immediately. Correspondence solicited.
rg*
ran. It was but yesterday, and that
lad was playing with tops, a buoyant
boy. He is a man and gone now.
There is no more childhood for him nor
for us Life has claimed him. When
a beginning is made, it is like a ravel
ing stocking, stitch by stitch gives way
until all are gone. The house has not a
child in it—there is no more noise in the
hall —hoys rush in pell-mell; it is very
orderly now. There are no more skatee
or sleds, bats, balls or strings left scat
tered around, things are neat now.
There is no delay now for sleepy folks;
there is no longer any task before you
lie down, or looking after anybody and
tucking in the bedclothes.
Oh for some children’s noise! We
wish our neighbor would lend us an
urchin or two to make a little noise in
The Famous Sunny South
B U O O "Y
/
5$Sh;
V W R.u'-k.w'
.Ml
'V//A -
1/
i r —
\ Yi\ . I '
Are you considering a ouggy? Don’t buy before seeing my Famous Sun
ny South Buggy, fitted with my new Patent Sorings. 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, madelfor Southern trade
and cannot be purchased elsewhere. Inquiries answered promptly.
E.BECKER
MILLEDGEVILLE, GA.
the formal praver that they once offer
ed, but she lingers now and tells them \
of Jesus who blessed little children and I
of the good place they all hopa to be at
last. And then she kisses them good
night. with something that the child
feels to be a heavenly benediction—a |
something that shall hold on to the boy
after he has become a man 40 or 50
years of age, for there is something in
a good, loving, Christian mother’s kiss
that 50 years cannot wipe off the cheek.
000
When one is inclined to worry, the
remark of an old lady should be recall-
ad: "Yes, dearies; I’ve had an awful
heap of trouble in my time, and most
of it never happened.”
Men of Courage Wanted.
| More men of courage. Surely that
1 is what the world needs to make it bet-
j ter.
Not the courage to fight and die on
the field of battle, but to live in ope’s
daily work when tho r e is much to de
press; to keep or. in the struggle when
failure attends the footsteps; to stand
at the post of duty when it is an ob
scure one and no voice of kind appre
ciation is heard.
We need men with courage to tell the
truth at the counter, even if a sale he
missed; to rebuke him who utters a pro
fane word in a public place; lo speak
on the unpopular side of a question;
and to vote, from deop conviction, with
a small majority. We need men with
courage to refuse to sign a petition of
an unworthy applicant for office, and
courage to do anything which makes a
majority to exclaim, "lie h very eccen
tric^” Some men will face the bayonet
sooner than a laugh, and cares less for
a blow than a word of contempt. It is
sad to think how many have been led
into intemperate and profligate habits
by the fear of their comrades laugs.ng
at their conscientious scruples. Oh,
for the courage to ray “No," when
sinners entice, and to say "Yes,” when
saints exhort.
000
Prompt People.
Don’t live a single hour without do
ing exactly what is to be done in it and
going straight through it from begin
ning to end. Work, play, study, what
ever it is, take hold at once and finish
it up squarely; then to the next th'ng,
without letting any moments drop be
tween. It is wonderful to see how
many hours these prompt people con
trive to make of a day; it is as if they
picked up the moments that the dwad-
lers lost. And if you find yourself
where ycu have so many things press
ing upon you that you hardly know how
to begin, let us tell you a secret; Take
hold of the very first one that comes to
hand, and you will find the rest all fall
into file, and follow afier, like a com
pany of well drilled soldiers; and though
work may be hard to m et when it
K
pn
j *
-- -- LONG DISTANCE t’HONE !7;i
GCi7 Broacl St AUOtTSTA C?.-^V
V »icwnraBM—pgj". ssee'..’ m ..iw, j
Southern Agmltorist
NaSHVILlE, TEW.
For 40 Years the Most Instructive am! Eitartalninj’
Paper for Southern Farm Families.
50 Cents A Year One Copy Free
charges in a squan. it is easily vanquish
ed if you can bring it into line.
000
What is needed most of all in bring
ing up children is example. Whatthev
see and hear and take in by absorption
in their young years, will, in most
cases, become the ruling traits of their
lives. Parents rarely fully realize to
what extent they stand an models to
their children.
Complete line high grade Brussels
Art Squares, Hags, Mattings. Purch
ase & Sale Co.
U p the river.
Down the lake.
Town Talk Flour
Takes the Cake.
VIA CENTRAL OF GEORGIA
Central of Georgia Railway will sell
ten-day tickets Milledgeville to Tybeo
and return, every Saturday, May 27th
to August 21st, lilOJ inclusive, at rate
of $7.50.
Summer excursion tickets will ulso
be on sale 'o principal resorts in tho
United States and Canada.
For further information call on A. D.
Nesbit, Ticket Agent, or address J. C.
Haile, Central Passenger Agent, Sa
vannah, Georgia.
Talcum powder of tho first quality 25
cts. per pound at-
Culvcr & Kidd’s
'V
* *** J/T -- --v_ Z
Jib/ y' X
e,< XVi
WHERE OCEAN BREEZES BLOW.
EXCURSION RATES
VIA
(entrain Georgia
railway
QUICK AND CONVENIENT SCHEDULES.
SPLENDID SERVICE FROM PLACES IN
GEORGIA AND ALABAMA.
ASK YOUR NEAREST TICKET AGENT FOR TOTAL RATES,
SCHEDULES, ETC.