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Sweetheart Toilet Soap
FREEH
FREE!
On Friday. Feb* 18th, a Coupon
.will be published in The News. If cut
-■ out and presented to your grocer or
any store where Sweetheart Soap is
sold, you will receive ONE full-size
cake of this high-grade toilet soap ab
solutely free.
We want every reader of this pa
per to try this soap at our expense;
then judge for yourself how superior
it is to soaps sold for five times its
price.
RETAIL GROCERS: Your jobber
will redeem the Coupons you take
in for the full retai Iprice in cash
The Milledge-
' ville News.
Sweetheart Soap is made from the
purest and best materials obtainable,
contains, cold cream, glycerine and
benzion, and will not irritate the most
tender skin.
It’s odor is like the sweet frag-
ranee of fresh-cut roses. Lathers free
ly in hard or soft water, and, for bath,
toilet and nursery, has no superior.
Try it and be convinced of its merit.
DON’T FAIL to order your soap
from your Wholesaler AT ONCE,
as this will be the largest distri=
bution of toilet soap ever made in
Milledgeville.
A. J. Carr Co.
Distributors.
¥ »■
The Protest of the,Pencil.
Judd Mortimer Lewis, the popular
let of ^The Houston Post, has been
iwamped” by requests for extra
ork, “gratis,” and he makes this
entie protest:
“It.is With our pencil that we are
•ging put a living for our little fami*
and sometimes it is mighty hard dig-
5 pt that, and why we should be ask-
o do things for nothing gets our
t, as> Teddy Robinson would say.
one asks a lawyer if he won’t pass
an'abstract for a couple who will
e been married fifty years at half-
; two next month. No one exoects
the wood sawyer to come around after
he is tired out from his day’s work and
saw a cord or two of wood for them be
cause he does it so artistically. No
body asks the banker if he won’t give
a nice little bank account to a sweet
young couple who are about to be mar
ried. Poems to birds, to babies, and to
old folks are only written to those whom
we know and love, and only then when
the spirit moves us. We cannot grant
one of these numerous requests without
granting all of them, and we cannot
grant all of them and hold our job."
The Milledgeville New3 of Foe. 18
will tell you something.
Goiiins and Gaskets
There is no guess work with us in
this DEPARTMENT.
We carry the most complete stock
of Undertaking Goods in Milledge
ville.
W6 M0U the onm Licensed
Maimer Here.
UMle Buggy & Fir. Co.
Store Phone 59. Residence Phones 188 and 198.
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1 3 A MAN OF CHEER
I attended a formal dinner one even
ing and one that required much time In
lt« passing. It sometimes happens that
things do not always run smooth on
puch occasions. It did not at this thn*.
The husband and wife did not ugrcc on
«omi things. Hho used words that werv
calculated to throw o damper over thoj
company. The husband averted such an'
end In a very successful way. He said,
' My dear, be careful how you use thorn
words. Don’t treat them so cruelly. Ev.
cry one of them has a history and s
d**nd man behind them. They are monu
ments to those who have lived. Be care
ful how you throw tomb-stones at folks. '
The Invit'd guests laughed, the wife
smiled and good cheer was established.
The whole dinner passed off ns one of
the happiest that I ever attended. It
was religious for him to give such a turn
to an embarrassing sLuatlon.
I attended nnother formal dinner and
things did not turr out this way. There
was a head-on collision between the
husband and wife, but no one to change
the embarrassment from that time until
the dinner was over. There was silence
or forced conversation to the end. It was
an Irreligious meal from beginning to
end.
It Is every man's duty to be cheerful
Dll the time. It Is best for himself and
for nil connected with him. Take tho
husband first spoken of, and you havo
an Illustration of what Is meant. lie had
practiced cheerfulness until It had be
come second nature to him and hence
t.-ls fine spirit under very trying circum
stances.
Tho world loves a cheerful man. He Is
sunshine to mpst hearts and lives. It
has no use for a sad, gloomy, complain
ing man. It leaves hlin severely alone.
•’Laugh and the world laughs with you. ’
He sour and the world will let you turn
to vinegar.
The man who makes the most of every
place that he fills, and cheerfully does
his worlc, will always have friends and n
Job. Rven business men like to have
bright, sunshiny men about them. It
makes burdens lighter and sorrows less
trying.
No man Is fit to associate with another
who grumbles at his work. Happiness is
the direct result of putting forth *n hon-
est effort to do faithful work. If a man
Is not cheerful as he tolls, either hi*
efTort Is not honest or his work Is poorly
done. Don’t grumble. Don’t murmur
Growling nover yet made an attractive
dog. It cannot make a lovable man. It
Is better to laugh than to cry. better to
smile than whine. It Is religious to be
cheerful.
Some Poultry Pointers
Don’t keep chickens If you can’t keep
them welL
The folks who fall hatching eggs with
hens will do no better with an Incuba
tor.
Nice to have a trough In which aoft
feeds may be fed to the hens.
Poultry experience la sometimes ex
pensive but if we have sense enough
to learn by It the money Is not all
tost.
Have you learned the value of bran
as a hen food. The feeding of bran
largely will Increase the egg yield If
other conditions are right.
Gorge the hens on com alone and you
will get few eggs and the hens will be
fat ns seals.
Whatever kind of a chicken house Is
used beware of draughts, they are harm-
ful even In warm weather.
Many people who are very particular
about keeping their bams and stables
clean are the opposite about their hen
house.
The deeper the scratching material the
more fun the hens seem to get out of
their digging and hunting.
A doxen hens that have plenty of roo-p
will lay more eggs than three times that
number overcrowded.
There Is a satisfaction tn producing an
extra fine product of anything; try It
on poultry.
Borne aay winter eggs are not worth
the trouble It takes to get them. Yes
they arc. It is such a luxury to have
eggs ut this season to eat If not to
sell.
If the hens are backward about mak
ing use of tb«lr dust box scatter a little
com or a handful of oats In the dust box
and the perverse creatures will soon be
scratching and dusting too.
Clean fine earth makes the best dust
bath. It Is the fine dust that fixes the
lice. Their power of respiration Is
through the body and this Is stopped by
fine dust.
Making brood coops U very profitable
work thst the men folks can do at od-
tlmes during the winter. Packing boxe;
may be transformed Into light substan
tial coops at small expense by a handy
man.
If practice makes perfect then many
lienkeoperH ure excellent guesners. They
guess they they have enough roosters
and guess It won't make any difference
If some of them ure related to tho hens.
They guess scrub chickens are no good
oh purenreds. Guessing Is uncertain and
much is lost by chicken folks because of
their guessing.
The flesh of a turkey that stays around
the house and eats with tho chickens
hasn't as good flavor as the range-fed
and fattened turkey. AM turkeys unsal
able for breeding should he disposed of
before tho New Year. If you happen to
have some very late hatched turkeys re
sults of a well hidden nest the best you
can do It to house them with the chickens
and give them the same care. We find
they do well In confinement In cold
weather. They can be sold In the soring
to the trade calling for small turkeys.--
Inland Furmer.
Dr. Bell’s Pine-T ar-Honey
For Coughs and Colds.
EXCURSION FARES,
VIA. Central of Georgia Railway
TO NEW ORLEANS, LA., account
Annual Session Annual Session Ancient
Arabic Order Nobles Mystic Shrine, to
be hold April 12-13, 1910.
W. II. MONTGOMERY SELLS:
25-lbs sugar for, $1.35
25-lbs cracked rice, $1
3- lb can St. Charles Coffee, $1
1-lb package parched coffee, 15c
4- lb starch, 26c.
6'bars Octagon soap, 25c.
5 gals kerosene oil, 75c.
1-doz. cans tomatoes, 80c.
3-cans Vans Camp's pork and beans,
26c.
All heavy goods at wholesale prices
W. H. Montgomery.
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HAVE YOU WORN YOUR “RUT” SO DEEP
AND WIDE THAT YOU CAN FIVE IN IT?
To the merchant who is destined to build a
big store success, the question—“Can I afford to
advertise aggressively?”—never occurs—unless it
occurs as a mere absurdity.
The merchant who is absorbed in bis store
making task will FIND WAYS TO “AFFORD”
more and more advertising—and his very enthu
siasm will breathe life into his ads.—and will make
them mirror his store as it is, and as it SHALL
BE.
“The Palterers who ask for certainty” will al
ways fail as merchants. They will stay in ruts un
til they wear these ruts deeper and -wider—and
until those same ruts will seem almoi/ like little
worlds, and fit to live in.
The awake merchant will make his advertis
ing blazon the path for his store—a new path, and
leading to a new success.
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