The Milledgeville news. (Milledgeville, Ga.) 1901-19??, August 20, 1909, Image 7

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\ - % GEOROIft'S LEADING DENTIST ■ Rliea ;ili ra fee ay tie 's Jeania By J. C. Moduliffe. DOCTOR LANIER MA60N.6A. When you visit Macon it wili pay you to consult Dr. Lanier~his offices are the largest and best equipp’d Den tal Apartments in the South. There you can’ have the finest Crown and Bridge made by Bid you ever bump up against fail ure and hit it hard? Well, if you never have then there’s something yet to live to do Most folk think there is a sublimity in success, but a man never knows what success is until failure stares him in the face That seems n rather hard thing to be lieve, but men who do and know will vouch for It any old time. There is more in knowing how to fall magnificently than there is in a lifetime of unbroken success. The fellow who goes along with all sorts of ideas about achievement can't tell the first principle of what It means to be a slruggler in the ranks of com mon men and toil along with the kith and kin of humanity. The man who engine* rs the plans that others carry out is a fellow to be talked about, but the one who follows far In the rear fighting to keep up is the hero of the throng. I never saw a time when things and seasons troubled the farmers more than they have during the last two or three weeks, but there’s no time to worry over It. I hate the fellow who says opportunity Is gone tomorrow will never come, and fortune's bugle blast is gone past his habitation. There is no such word as stopping. There is really nothing like failure. It Is only so-called, but sometimes it appears to be mighty loudly called. It frightens everybody within the sound of Its terrible voice and disheartens and discourages many a man who fain would light on and on for years and years. Don’t tell me that failure Is loss sublime than success. Don’t tell me that offert is not worth ns much as achievement. I know that achieve, ment Is the thing that counts. I know that the world laughs In deris ion at failure. But I have seen many cases in which the glorious dawn of hope and accomplishment 1ms been shattered by the furious blast of others upon a single movement. I have seen enough of discouragement | and disaster placed In a man's path j to crush life’s most beautiful roses | and yet above the thorns and ashes I of the highest desires there is today a future just as bright as that of a dozen years ago and while he may never realize its fullness till the noise of years is over nnd gone and the dust aid riot ef struggles are past yet I look forward to the time when earth shall reason with the true and right- cous spirit and if mortals fall then on across the lulls of time there is an j endless season of joy where one mo- 1 ment of eternity will be a recom pense for a thousand years of doubts and toil and struggles. But there Is another side to hu manity ami its struggles. Did you ever feel the sunshine enveloping you in it3 glorious folds and sending you sweetly along the path of accomplish ed purposes? Well, that’s an oppo site picture, but It brings us at last to the same old goal. Ecstacy is short lived when It comes with some blessed gust of fortune sending us on ward to our point. That is not the material which is needed to outlnst the winds of time and the reasons tf adversity. I had rather hnv e about me the fel- | low who shoulders bravely the task allotted, whether It appears hard or not, and go Ills way hopeful that to morrow might bring sv relief, than to have the fellow around who always ! gloats over the past accomplishment. ! In short today is the time we need men to work. Today is the hour that the world is looking for people to come to the front. There is nothing in saying what happened yesterday and nthlng In what may happen to morrow. Just for today there Is a task for every man to do. Bringing It Into rural life and ru ral scenes there Is a lesson wide as the boundless limits of time for farm ers and those out In God's own coun try to do a greater and better work than ever. While It seems that a blighting hand has been laid on the land during the last few weeks there is back of It all a sort of a radiance that will illume the path of the fu ture with a resplendent view which will cast a reflection through ages to come. | So to the farmer and his kind there is a work to do teday that will be of Immense benefit not only to the man of today, hut of tomorrow and for- 1 ever. A silo well filled with nutritious and appetizing silage places the dairy farmer and live-stock feeder in a po sition of independence so (nr as fail ing pactures or the temporary short ness of the usual animal rations Is concerned. Corn and cowpeas are th main sling crops. Now Is a good time to provide ttiu silo and to ar- j range for Its filling Inter iy the stim uli r. Farmers with silos well filled are always the most contented, flee from worry, ana generally are more prosperous than their neighbors who are without them. It Is no uncommon occurrence for Leghorn hens (especially the old ones) to become broody but they are not ditficult to break up and in a very short time are back to business again. Don't overfeed the joung turkeys; keep them just a little hungry so they will pu't In full time hunting for bugs and get the exercise they need. MORE PRAISE FOR RHODE ISLAND REDS wmmsmm Some women retain tlicir beauty to an advanced | age. But women, wlio regularly endure pain, age rapidly, for suffering leaves its lasting marks on I them. Nearly all women suffer more or less with some I form of female trouble. It should not be neglected. I Avoid the pain—treat yourself at home by taking I | Cardui, as thousands of other women have done.! j Begin at once and give Cardui a fair trial. at Half you have been paying for inferior work. TEETH EXTRACTED WITHOUT PAIN and beautiful ones inserted without artificial plates. El Will Help You J 33 Iffra. Katie Itnrlison, Goreville, 111., tried Cardui and writes: I “I suffered with female troubles, and was so sick 1 could not stand | on my feet. Finally I began to take Cardui, and soon Itegun to mend. Now I ant able to do all my housework and am in much better health titan I was before.” Try it. DRUG ST0RE3 They Are Proving Favor ites With the Majority of Poultry People. After many yean of poultry raising nnd experience with several differ ent breeds, 1 have decided that the Rhode Island Reds are the most prof itable fowl to keep They ore large fowls, good layers (especially In win ter) good sitters, and excellent moth ers. They grow fast and resist dis ease better than any breed I eve- raised. I also keep Barred 1*. Rocks, and to test the laying qualities of the Rods with the Rocks I selected four hens of each breed, penned them up Jail. 1, nnd kept, a correct account of nil eggs laid for three months end ing March 31, and found 112 eggs In favor of the Reds. Those two pens had exactly the same feed and care. This t< at convinced me that the R. I. Red Is a better all-purpose fowl than the old favorite 11. P. Rock. They are as large as the Rocks, grow fust, are better winter layers, better mothers, resist disease better and are prettier to look at. In fact, in the R. I. Reds we have what the Jersey nnd Holstein are to the dairy men. Whatever breed you keep, by all means keep put'e-breed fowls. The men or woman who keeps mongrels Is certainly not an enthusiastic poul try ruiBer. I still have a few nton- l grels myself, but am getting rid of { them as fast as 1 can fatten them for , the market, for l think It a waste of time to raise mongrels, or any other scrub stock for that matter. It costs just ns much to raise a mongrel as It does to raise a pure bred fowl, mid it sells for about one- fourth what you could gift for a pure bred bird. Now I know that I hnve not got the only good breed of chickens, hut It has proved the best for me, for I like to raise broilers and have a few eggs to sell too. I have sold over >50 worth of eggs this spring, uteu about half that many, and set several hundred.—Mrs. Alva Chestnut, In In land Farmer. 116 PLAGE 605 Cherry Street, Macon, GEORGIA. If ft was not for butter color, not a pound of oleomargarine or poor blot ter could never hnve been sold as the genuine, (clean product of the cow. Geimlne* Neural WMsScey is a tonic, the medicinal quaiiiv-s of which are fully recognized by the highest medical authorities. It your system needs building up or H your r.crvc3 are “on edge" try h fTN mi le#* -I •> TT/N We believe in doing business in Au gust right along and if you'll pay us a dollar lor The News a year we’ll give a pair of scissors worth the money and the paper is wortli twice as much. tic PiJR&fOOD WMsLiey It will restore your old time vigor in almost no time—by using Sunny lirook moderatelyycu are bound to benefit yourhealth in general. See that you get the genuine—accept r.o substi tutes. Every bot Je bears the Government "Green Stamp”— certifying to the exact Age, Proof and Measure. No homo should be without it. ■ DELIVERS!* DIRECT 70 YOU EXPRESS PREPAID UY ANY OF TUG FOLLOWING DISTRIBUTERS: PATTI, It'YMAN, 416 w. 4th St., Cincinnati. Oh'o. M. MARK.ST KIN, 123 .Sycarnoro St. “ CHAS. Bl.UVt & CO.. J»e»»onvJl*. TW. r. r BUTLF.R. Jacksonville. Ft*. > I LOFB WHISKEY CO., Jacksonville Fla. ai-tman.whiskey CO. •; 1 r> 1 & r. p. i.ongi GREIL TRADING CO . Pcnsaco’a. Fla. BIRMINGHAM LIQUOR CO.. Pensacola. Fla. RE1D;WH13KEY CO . * ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ THE PlRFECT WAY Scores of K!Ilcdccvi!le Citizens Have Learned II. If you suffer from backache. There is only one way to cure it. The perfect way is to cure the kidneys. A bad back means sick kidneys. Nr gleet it, urinary troubles follow. Doan's Kidney 1’ilis are made for kidneys only. Are endorsed by Milledgevillo people. J. R. Duke. 3li N. Jefferson St., Mil- ledgeville, Ga., says:” I have been us- j iog Doan’s Kidney S ills fora f«:tv weeks I and have received more benefit from them ti.an from any other kidney re. |medy, 1 have ever tried. I suffered | from kidney trouble forsoin:- time and j try tack ached, severely. The ki Iney secretions were irregular in passage j and caused me much annoyance. I fin- ! ally procured Doan's Kidneys Pills at Geo. D. Case’s drug 3tore ar.d began 1 using them. Since that time I have been steadily improving Tand take plea sure in recommending Doan's Kidney 'Pills to others.” | For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co , Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United j States. I Remember the name—Doan’s—and ; take no other. • * ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ * ♦ ♦ ♦ * ♦ ♦ ♦ « ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ * ♦ ♦ ♦ ❖ l> ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ Jefferson Standard Life Insurance Co. . Home Office: RALEIGH, N. C. Strongest in The South. and safe as any any where, Our Standard Guar anty Policy is one of the most attractive contracts ever put on the market. g Bottles $ Tj /g Bottles $ l-5tb CaUc-igl I (rpS, F»U Quart! M Rjv or Bourbon ' «, -1 R"* l.'r'irVaBi :-cu* rwariArc. Wok your order. no pejji c.v. 9. Ail Seeks Include Writ* R. H. BOIIO-a. This Policy offers you Life Insur ance, Endowment Investment, Cumulative Deferred Dividends and Accident Insurance, all in one. You would do well to inspect it be fore insuring elsewhere. Call on our nearest agent or write the Home Office direct. We also issue all kinds of Limited Payment. Straight Life and En dowment Policies. Surplus to Policy Holders $493,497.03; Jos. G. Brown, President, P. D. Gold, Jr., 1st V. P.&G.M Chas. W. Gold, Sec’y Sc Supt. of Agencies. H. H. Bass, Mgr. Atlanta, Ga. Bloodworth and Bloodworth AGENTS Milledgeville, Ga. / ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦*♦♦♦