The Milledgeville news. (Milledgeville, Ga.) 1901-19??, July 09, 1909, Image 7

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■ —« CO=OPER A HON A NOTIONAL THEME WITH NEARLY ALL NATIONS, ,v*> T'.gtjP-'; liam fianl k : . rSmJm* *- ‘ - «- t?Sar^!5r?T z=±rjm Capitol Dome /root Naval I Monument Waahmfllon T'C. Whiskey for Medic2Eisi3 Use should be the real genuine article, combining rich flavor with absolute purity. SunnyBrooR the PURL FOOD Whiskey Is pure, natural whiskey, distiiled and aged in the coed old Kentucky way. Age, Proof and Quantity attested by the Government “Green Stamp" which seals every bottle. The richness of flavor and soft mellowness of Sunnv Brook Whiskey especially recommends it for home use as a health ful stimulant and a wholesome tonic. < DELIVERED DIRECT T3 YOU EXPRESS PREPAID BY ANY OF THE FOLLOWING DI3TR BUTERS: M. MARKS l'.;iN. Chattanooga. I'**n:i i„ l» DaNIKL. Mjcr.. C au.tuoojra, r« nn. i *< T I. IIKYMAN. OHhui *«a. i*ntt. CHAS. BUT.! A C *. J»*ckjo villa. rla. • a. MU 1 LEU. dn-i.HJnv.iK-, Fla. L. LOEB WHI 'kti i O.. I’oniafrly ut Montpo r m.ry Ala.. I Co-cperation is already a national ‘ factor in several countries, it is well j introduced In nearly ail the conimer ! cial nations, it is cstalished world movement, and is spreading with increasing momentum. Twenty years ago there were a little over a million co-operators in Great Britain 1 doing a business of say two hundred i millions a year. There are now two and a half million members and five hundred million businesses of which ] about seventy million is of their own manufacture. Twenty years ago, co-operation had barely begun la Denmark. Accord ing to Cabinet Minister Hogsboro, who is himself a leader In the move ment, four-llfths of the Danes are now co-operators. Cooperation has changed Denmark from a country o! poor peasants on poor land to a cun l French President Was Not Frctectfid Ic If. Alleged That the Police \V ere Prevented From Giving For m e r French President Proper Protection. PARIS.—The tragedy surrounding the (h ath of Felix Fatiro was no soon er rlcakcd over than public opinion was brought face to face with an other mystery of l.ntln politics—the •ry cf prosperous farmers on rich death of President Carnot. A morn- land. The cow, acting through thei |n K paper accuses General Borins at.d | co-operative creamery, has done it, Dttpoy, one of the leading radicals ol and the pig and the hen have done being the "indirect assassins’’ cf the their large part, also through the co opt rat ivo societies. Ireland caught the spirit from Eng land and there are now 1,030 co-oper- prodocessor of Felix Fame The charge is based on statement:- made by M. ltlvnud, former prefer; the P.hcne, who was made tin Now at Jaekso C.RFTL TRAOI.n *1 i O.. !’ i. i M Ntiii A *t LIQ • Kid AUlSXFt' t. ».> I-u •la. Fla alive creameries, credit societies, poul-j srnpegoat cl this sinister affair. Hi try and egg societies, bacon factories,! had been stripped of all his police supply associations, stores and home powers and the president of France industries, not only making many was guarded on his famous trip 1" times more income, but they have the exposition of l.vons enlv bv agents i brought the warring factions In pol „f the Elyseo palace and those or tin litirs and religion together on the vital Surete. ] subject of making a better living and Bluntly the I,Hire parole charges being better neighbors, that these police officials were the | Further corroboration cf Mr. Boose-1 very’ones who prevented M. Rivaud i f,. om protecting Carnot against tin * JM Bottles 3J| M Bottles fjl I-Sthtiallcn /[fl. Full Quarts | Rye or Bourbon | ■ Rye or Bourbon V Shipped to plain boxes. Send remittance with your order. No goods , hipped C. O. D. .•elt’s report, is the record here ' home. The orange growers of Calt- K.rnla have for a dozen years had a I co-operative association for packing, | shipping and selling their fruit with | annual sales of over ten million dol-| i lars. Warehouses and salesmen are lualntained In all the chief Eastern I cities. There are hundreds of farm-! the Pa tin Cement COM last yt\ (travel 3 A N Y Or AUGUSTA. GA■ Best, cheapest, ana m >3t durable material for walk, street an.) raa 1 build ing on the American continent. Less dust than any material known. 1 • .ar or train load lots at our pits. For information addresu W. F. EVE, AOEWT AUGUSTA, GEORGIA BAD PRODUCTS NOT GOOD FOR EATING Undesirable Results Com ing From Using Poor Grade Stuff. Another outbreak of tuberculori i t? reported from various quarters. Isn't It time for scientists to set'll some thing about this disease and give dairymen a rest? Too much bad butter Is ria’le. and it is generally due to b.*d hr.rdiing of the cream In its early stag -i. Ab solute cleanliness is nece(sa r .i. Paper bottles are now used for sun- plying milk to patrons In St. Loris, and their use will doubtless be rapidly extended all ov(r the country. Their cost is abcut one-sixth that of glass. Great progress Is being made In the dairy business, and it consists prin cipally In securing a clean and whole some product. Skim milk warm from the separa tor has the same value as when al lowed to coc! anil whs then again warmed up. Vet yon will better feed it at once )o avoid risk of souring. The self : ml; ng cow may he cured by strapping a sick over her ud ler so she "tail no* g»t to The sack must he specially fitted. To prevent white places In butter do not ripen, the cream so long and stir It during the process; also strain it into the churn. It pays every dairyman to r.fttdy up his business thoroughly. With the numerous dairy publications no* printed there 1? no excuse for Ignor ance cn the part of any Intelligent man who can get 'nformatlcn by reading. So for. ever two hundred distinct types of bacteria have bei n found in milk products. Some produce g'-od effects and ot'arr3 had. The kinds of fermentation they make are nearly as numerous an the bacteria them selves. The Ftah Experiment station has determined the cost cf producing a cow two years old to he J36.fi”. This shows that cows aTe not selling too high. An absolutely spatnless milk can has been constructed. It can be clean ed perfectly and also retltined when desired. Mr. Charles Foss, cf Indiana, made onlv J.iO per cow each year for but ter fat, but by testing and other mod ern methods he has brought the aver age up to J 136.85. known plot of the anarchists. Charges Made In Case. The facts, as related by the risian newspaper are these: While driving to the exposition preside nt was set upon by a ruffian who forced his way to the carriage. The prefect, Rivaud, knocked hint co-operative elevators in the down. A minister, whoso name is grain states ol tho middle West. Co-jnct yet revealed, reproached the pre- operative creameries have changed feet for interfering eml bode trim Minnesota from a wln-nt state which tnoniln r he had nothing to do with Impoverishes the land, to a dairy Carnot's safe’ty—that was it police state, which enriches it. It made matter. i thirty million dollars wc.rlh or butter The Lyons police were systomatl llast year, most or It In co-operative cally kept In the dark regarding tho ties. Wisconsin is a close sec- presidential itinerary. As to the Iowa third, agents of the F.lysee. they were sent the seventies a wave of granger by General llorlus to one end of the alive stores swept ever tho city when It wees known the prosl- lanel .but tho wave soon subsided, dent would be tit the other. Thus, at leaving but a few survivors. There the moment cf the assassination, they remain some old and prosperous were carefully guarding one entrance stores serving as evidence that the while the president had left by the plan Is workable In America. other irate, California has a husdred or more Moreover, the officers whose duty co-operative stores and a wholesale, 't was to ride alongside the carriage. Minnesota and Wisconsin have about lmd been sent nwav by General Botin, :e hundred large stores, most of which And It was Qener.nl Borins who ot 'are In a league and are projecting a dried the coachman of the presid e- wholesale. In Texas there Is nn ac- <l»l carriage to drive at a fast trot, live movement to establish co-opera- "hlcli resulted in tho detectives, who live farmers' associations among the followed nfoot, lining left far In the m green or tin nearly 50Q popular rear. The result was the police roach- farmers' Improvement sncletlei, . < <1 ths carriage only after Carnot had In the South, no start lias yet. been hern stabbed--just in time to arrest made except In truck shipping and *•«*• Caserlo. cvnUy some creameries. The Faint* Mme. Carnot Warned, eis' Fnlon had its inception In co-op- Graver charges are made. The eratlve buying of feed ami fertilizer Libre Parole asserts that letters sent and co-operative selling of potatoes, to Mme. Carnot, warning her of the but It soon got switched to holding t'lan to assassinate her husband, were I cotton to force up the price. A sys- Intercepted by tho authorities; that hematic propaganda -hus been started 11 telegram to the same effect from to organize the Southern farmers into the queen-regent of Spain was never ) co-operallve gins, creameries, associations and credit societlr_. | first completed association Is a croam- clans that Carnot had no Intention of ] (ry in Virginia, but several othe rs are aeiklng We have just received congratula tions from the New York Finan= eier, stating that we are now en tered on th? Roll of Honor, and that out of 12,000 State Banks in the United States less than 650 have attained this distinction. We solicit your patronage. We pay 4 per cent, on time sav=» ings, compounded every six months. Merchants & Farmers Bank' J no. T. Allen, Pres. L. C. Hall, Cashier Jno. T. Day, Assistant Cashier. ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ * ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ * ♦ ♦ c ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ■> ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ •» ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ i Rhea ayne s By '/. C. McAuliffe. 1 In my line cf work there comes , take H everywhere in life, and you'll something of every phase of Ufa, In find this true. Map It out In every- the country on the farm, down in tne day work and carry It along as u city In the store and factory, among ] guide in the walk of life, mid It'll lln 1 rich and poor. Some of these | be valuable on more than one occa- Ihings are pathetic in the extreme and awaken pity among tho most unsenti mental, to say nothing of tlie sensa tions that must spring up ill the healt unit soul of those who long to .',eo higher planes of life and nobler schemes of living. In tills connec tion there comes the farm girl. So nine'll lias been said about keeping the farm boy at homo and so llttlo about the girl. It Is a great pity iliut pages are not devoted to tho work of keeping the farm gil'l at home, for there she is it lily without taint, a woman who will always reign queen. Von can go down to tho city and see tho young girls who huvo gone from the country a ad grown oid and wrinkled long before their time, trying to battle against the fateful forces cf circumstances and, oh, so many of them fall. One may talk about the failure ot a man. The flower of the flock lu tho way of young manhood may go down to the city and plunge Into the depths of the city’s vice and lose what it takes a llfe-tlino to make, but within a few short years he can by man fill effort regain part of hU tor*, trophies. It Is not so with the farm girl. When once she leaves home she takes a certain step that can never be retraced. She mars (ho , ,, . . . l i « I1UV« I III? I Ul I illt'U. DlltJ Illfll n ■ Ilrj (supply vcre.1. The m-wspap. r adds hat f, , of natur „. H glf , ,. ho , nnoceI1( . a The If It lmd been known to l e polltl-, ,ft a( be , |o tll0ae for whom th , ro inid term, he would no' Dr. W. N. Sanborn, one cf our best authorities upon poultry diseases,! sa*s it Is Infinitely better to take splendid (arc of your little chicks In , . ... -1 ( ami s: effort to keep them afti r •'‘ s than one hundred members. tnev have become sick, for there is have been assassinated. “Caserlo,” it states, “was a lunatP who had been egged on by ^gent* provocateurs notably by a certain l.oumet, n pretended anarchist, who under another name, was employed In the police department. in process of formation The underlying principles of eo-op- eratlon are an iqual vote and respon sibility, minimum interest on capital, profit to the customers or tho work ers, buying and selling for cash and at market prices; no discrimination as to membership. In a store the cr-nal Is made up by subscriptions to the capital by not In creamery the owners of 500 er more n.aliy Hit link that can be clone for rA, '* s r,i - n an c«roemont to supply Witli Each Order for Old Time frlrk chicks. In fact, the doctor but ftoni a certain number of cows reiterates the experience cf a gen r- - fr l* 11 * 00 years and to be jointly liable* alien cf practical poultrymcm and ^ 1 nio,lf> V borrowed U' erect a p' ultrywomen. despite the fact er amcry. The cost la r.bout $.1,000 that ho much fuss is made by all BOLD PLATED RINli FHEF Sons Eook at 10c. which Is paid off by deducting five ■ f us about what to do with the* sick l ,Pr r<,,| f from the milk deliveries, little chicks. Abcut tile only thing , A rrrdlt noot.ity is an unlimited lia- that proves successful In the end is ! bihty association to rccclvu deposits the getirg rid of the sick ones and putting the w< plane of living bllity association |nnd borrow money which Is lent its members on personal security for purposes 52 dc-ar old tunes we ill love, words and muflic complete for piano of organ, to for 10 cents. Ameriga, Annie Laurie Auld Lang Syne, Battle Hymn of the 1! ones upon a higher, profitable productiv.. I A supply association Is formed to Republic, Catch the Sunshine, Colum- •buv the heavy farm requirements, re- bin, Cornin’ Thro’ the Rye, Darling Nel ■ Ins, fr ah eggs and fat poultry, , , „ Mri.i as to color and size, ships to lie Gray, Dixies Land, I* lag of the he br st market and returns 'he full i.’ ree> Hail Columbia, Home, Sweet nrooced.'! to each member, „ , , , , ,, , Horne, Juanita, Lead Kindly Liuht, l-i forming a co-operative associa- . •ion, there must bo a sufficient num- Lilly Dale, Long ago, Marching Thro’ be-, they must understand and want Georgia, Massa’s in the Cold Ground. My (o-cji' ntlon, they must agree to use il: ; (iafion exclusively, they must Bonnie, My Maryland, Old Kentucky have a competent marjgsr, and suir pert him and they must make it open " •'!>• Inrlading those who may not R oc k e d in the Cradle of the Deep* chmse to jr.-in the association but will patronize it, these receiving half the benefits. Cooperation is not a revolutionary, but it .'s a radicai change from the rnpiisllst trade system. It is an In- destrial d imceracy, by tho people, for the people, orf the people.—Sourii- trn Cultivator. We Ask You to take Caraul, for your female troubles, because we are sure it will help you. Remember that this great female remedy— Home, Old Black Joe, Rcdin Adair. has brought relief to thousands of other sick women, so why not to you? For headache, backache, periodical pains, female weak ness, many have said It Is “the best medicine to take.” Try it! Sold in This City „ Shoo-Skeeter will do the work 25c. Culver & Kidd. ■ *u*~ tr>- - -jto- ^' “SSL ^ ‘ C ^' Baldwfn Go. BriGK & Pottery Go. Swanee River, Sweet and Low, Blue Bells of Scotland, Last Rose of Summer, Old Oaken Bucfie', Star Spangled Ban ner, Vacant Chair, Those Evening Bells, Tramp, Tramp, Tramp, Uncle Ned, We're Tenting Tonight, When the Swallows Homeward Fly, and twenty others for 10c, stamps or coin. For a 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. is: if/ if/ if/ \W Is now fully equipped to furnish you with heit grade Brick in any ’quantity fiom one to as many thousands as is needed. Size 2^X4xS. These brick are guaranteed to be first class in every respect. Coirespondence solicited. FIRST CLASS END CUT BRICK. HARD BURNED. NOTHING BETTER MACE. EMMETT L. BAIINES. M ANAGE. niL’/iD i I/IL . a*. y\\\ w 'fi r*> m \9J Don’t Get A Divorce. A western judge granted a divorce on account of ill-temper and bad breath. Dr. King’s New Life Pills would have prevented it. They cure Constipation, causing bad breath and Liver Trouble the ill-temper, dispel colds, banish head aches, conquer chills. 25c at ail drug gists. A velvety sod Where radiant flowers bloom, Where none have trod Have fairies’ feet and The favored of God.” When the dividing line between home and-farm and city is establish ed it Is hard to eradicate. There is some barrier builded that human strength Adds It almost. Impossible to | surmount and In the cud there coini s discouragement mid heartaches. Uet- utr far the humble animals, th” lov ing ones around you, the kindly gre. r- Ing of the farm animals, the music of :he birds, tho harmony of mtt'i.’o, than the dismal life In the city, alone with liimdredii around you, Isolated In the midst of humanity, with never an eye to pfiy and never a kindred som to know the anguish of such a life. Good Times in Georgia. Tho peaches are ripening, Hie blackberries are here and Hie watjr- molon Is smiling on the vino. Money would be a little scare In Georgia this time of the year if It were not for peaches and melons. MlH'ous cf dollars are brought into clrcur.tlai from those sources every year. If 'lie peaches do not promise .ve’l then the growers plant lots of m-ious and consequently the Northern and East ern markets are supplied wlih some thing good from this ntiite. fiu ibis year the peaches will bo fine, rhero v/ill be a few thousand lon3 mis than last season, Jjut. indications point to to a fine quality of fruit of splendid size. Tills will, in a measure, offset teh small quantity. The cotton and corn and cane, sweet potatoes, cowpeai and a do/.tn other ciojs are doing nicely, and if no mishap occurs Georgia will be | ahead of what It was last year. Th.- . planters in Georgia didn't come out. | 9 quite as well last season as they did ♦ year before last, and on the who.e they had loth of room fdr complaint. But they are not made of that kind of stuff—these staunch old soldiers of the soil, who have fought all kinds of fights In the battle of life— and they went to work to overcome the difficulties arising from a short crop year, but they’ll succeed, for they aren’t made of the matorial'that ' ♦ knows how to fall. Planting Late Crops. This Is the time of year when Southern farmers enn with profit turn their attention to growing, or rather planting, late crops. The great and successful men In every walk of life give strict attention to the little things, the minor crops when It comes to the farm. The most of us, whether we he farmer or business that back beVnd ns and on ahead I there aval's an oasis for U3 if we go sion. The little tilings of life, in the fam ily and with Ihe neighbors, are the greatest of all the assets wo may have. It helps a fellow when he feels that seasons are against him and crops promise poorly. II helps when lio Is away from home, and no one conies to give him tho bigger and so- called more important things of life. It is the trifles that make the world brighter anil cause the sunshine to tadlate more brilliantly as we iravol ionoly through the vales where every body must go alone*. If wo are In tho desert, so to speak, It makes the desolation more bearable to think back or keep on—and bo few of us out wait in (lie mld.it of trials and troubles we never know how many of those good friends would bring help and succor to us if we kept quiet and steady in the midst of all alarms. ;'d rather give a smile and a bless ing, over so small, to those that need it than to he an emperor with power to disseminate honora and glories where they were not needed. This Is one of the Instances where It Is In finitely greater to do the small work (hmi It is the large. Wo cannot al ways measure the' scope of charity, or the good we may do by the effort we pul forth. The little things that come from the heart without percepti ble effort are the mightiest factors In creation's plan, and whether we give lhe3o efforts on the farm or Id the city, on Ihs mountain, plain or sen, their value, remains the same and somewhere someone Is longing for the smile and encouragement which any of us can give.—Home and Farm. YES—YOU CAN BUY THINGS MORE CHEAPLY AT : A STORE THAT ADVERTISES! Why let mosquitoes trouble you when , man. often neglect the small details 'you can stop them bv usin r Shoo- "Oly to find In .he f.rlah 'hat the." nr" | fckeeter 25c. Culver i Kidd. 1 t * ,t ' ,,c ®* count when we make . o ^ up the final trial balauce. You cur If you w to a merchant, would n’t you rather ,stdl a thousand yarns of silk in a day, at a profit of 10c a yard, than to sc*ll (with out advertising) fiftv yards, at a profit of 25cts ay aid? Isn’t it plain that in all such instances the buyer gets the ben efit of the ‘‘volume of business” which advertising enables the merchant to do? The money cost of a journey— long or short—by stage coach (not to count time, < r comfort) was greater than that of a pres ent day journey bv railway. The “old ways” of doing thing were not even CHEAPER. —o— The cost of thirgs in an old- fashioned store nowadays is greater than in the progressive stores—the advertised stores. It’s not even CHEAPER to pat ronize the non-progressive mer chant—not to count the unwis dom of helping make it possible for reactionary and non-progres sive merchants to still “do busi ness'” MORAL- Trade with Advertisers in THE NEWS.