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TOPICS OF THE TOWN.
By "Observer.”
“ I have used
Sloan’s Liniment on
a fine mare for splint
and cured her. This
makes the third
horse I’ve cured.
Have recommended it to my neigh
bors for ihrush and they say it is fine.
I find it the best Liniment I ever
used. I keep on hand your Sure
■Colic Cure for myself and neigh
bors. and I can certainly recom
mend it for Colic."—S. E. Smith,
McDonough, Ga.
Cured Thrush.
Mr. R. W. Parish, of Bristol,
lnd.,R. No. j, writes:—’'I have used
lots of your Liniment for horses and
myself. It is the best Liniment in
the world. I cured one of my horses
of thrush. Her feet were rotten;
the frogs came out; she laid down
most of the time. I thought she
would die, but I used the Liniment
as directed and she never lies down
in the daytime now."
SLOAN'S
LINIMENT
should be in every stable and ap
plied at the first sign of lameness.
You don't need to rub. it penetrates.
Will kill a spavin,
curb or splint, re
duce wind puffs
and swollen joints,
and is a sure- and
speedy remedy for
fistula, sweeney,
founder and thrush.
Price, 50c. and $1.00
Slonn'a book on
boriM-H, caUU 1 ,
Mini poultry 04*111
free. Aililrena
Dr. Earl S. Sloan,
Boston, Maas., U. S. A.
If you have a farm to
buy or a farm to sell it|
will pay you to see J
O. Bloodworth, be
cause he knows.
A few weeks ago there appeared in riers’ window on Sunday?
this column an article relative to the f contend the number is small and con-! swing — pulling
itv mail carriers having their Sunday
holiday. -In order to get this it
necessary that a vote of the patrons of
the carriers deliveries be taken on the
question. Should the majority vote in
favor of the proposed reform it ctn
soon be accomplished.
| feThe city carriers perform their duties
day after day in all kinds of weather,
j On Sunday at exactly the hours when
all the churches are holding services
, these public servants are compelled to
be at work to accommodate a few
people.
How many call for mail at the car-
. vilHLOS GREATEST SEWIN6 MACHINE
LIGHT
Not being in possession of the facts
of Milledgeville's advantages what do
vou do? Commence to marshal an array
I of figures for your home town in con-
! troversion of the theory advanced by
'your friend regarding his town.s su-
periorurity? No! Not being ’’loaded"
with a “boostur argument,” as the
♦ ♦ ♦ I easiest way out of your embarassing
— I position you commence to knock, knock,
Carriers I knock, and the anvil chorus is in full
down the town you i
Silence!
sists mainly of boys and gills. Of these
some neither expect nor receive mail
and call simply because they see others
do it. Then, again, others call for mall
which could in a majority of cases wait
until next day without inconvenience.
Business houses all have boxes and get
mail at any time, and the number of
people really accommodated is not
large.
The question is, Would the genuine
patrons be willing to await delivery on
Monday morning and thus give the
carriers a genuine holiday? Detroit has
inaugurated the movement with suc
cess, and now Macon is advocating it
for that city. It is bound to come
sooner or later. Don’t let progressive
Milledgeville be in the roar rank, but
let us be where we Delong —the first
city In the state in progressiveness, if
not in size.
This column is open for opinions from
the citizens on this and other subjects.
Sn
'.‘‘von vrnnl (*lth>
9 or a HI
Hcwlug Machine write to
!E YiW HOME SEWINQ MACHINE COMP
Orange, Mi
**wlnir machine* arc made to tell rctcardlr
.it:* In;uhe New II*»in« Li made
Our s arat.ty never runt out
’<1 by authorised denier* only*’
roa lAtr wv
R. H. WOOTTEN
The following, clipped from an ex
change, is too good to be passed by.
(’hanging the names of city and county,
i# hereby published in full:
\
“Know Your City.” That was the 1
slogan of Trenton, N. J., for the past
week. And it’s a good slogan, too,
don’t you think?
Commencing Monday morning the
city of Trenton put on a “Know Your
City” celebration which continued until
Saturday. The celebration was in the
nature of an inauguration of a cam
paign for municipal education bused on
the theory that countless numbers—
perhaps a majority—of the citizens of
that city are content to spend their
days in a place without knowing the
reason why they are living there today.
The enterprising citizens of the New
Jersey town are going to Rtamp in
delibly upon tile minds of every person
living within its incorporate limits the
advantages that Trenton has over
every other locality on this mundane
jhere of ours, or burst in the attempt!
should be endeavoring to build up. to
the everlasting advantage of vour more
enterprising neighbor.
Now, let's unison together, good
people of Milledgeville and Baldwin
county. We have got to get . busy,
haven’t we?-if we hope to advance even
proportionately with our neighbors
during the next decade. We have the
climate, the national resources, the
geographical location for making one
of the most populous counties in Geor
gia. Milledgeville is admirably located
with reference to trade territory for
the building up of a city of 10,000
people by 1920. These facts are the
basis for intelligent work, so let's be
up and doing with the resolution that
we will individually and collectively
pull for Milledgeville und Baldwin
county, or pull out!
I will be glad to publish each week in
this column any data and information
that might be furnished me that will
help us in this campaign of education
that you and 1 have started today. Any
information you are in possession of—
or might be able to collect with but
slight inconvenience to yourself—that
will tend to put Milledgeville and Bald
win county attractively before the
ubllc, send it to the “Observer," care
News, and it will be given due
iderntion in turn. No article will
be V published—remember,—that does
not Lear the writer’s correct name. If
desirVd, your namo will not appear in
connection with the data you furnish.
Make! these little “True Stories of
Milledgeville und Baldwin County" as
concise as possible and I believe a great
good w II accrue to the town and count v
as a d rect result of their dissemina
tion.
This ittle personal notes is respect
fully el reded to the teachers, the
preache s, the lawyers, the bankers,
the me ’chants, the farmers, the pro-
fessior I men and the private citizens
of this city and county.
SAMUEL EVANS,SONS & CO.
GOTTON-BROKERS AND WAREHOUSEMEN
has occurred to me that a plan of
j scope might be evolved here in
Milledgeville—the best town on the top
side of God’s earth, if we are just care
ful enough to look out for the good
things. We often look in wonderment
at a person from Atlanta who can
stand up and recite facts and figures—
Every Accommodation and Convenience for I and some fiction, no doubt—about the
Our Customers and theT rad e. I different advantages of his city until he
. I is blue in the face!
HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR COTTON
Your Patronage Solicited. \
The instinct of modesty natural to every woman is often a
great hindrance to the cure of womanly diseases. Women
shrink from the personal questions of the local physician
which seem indelicate. The thought of examination is ub-
horrent to them, and so they endure in silence a condition
of disease which surely progresses from bad to worse.
if has been Dr. Pierce’s privilege to cure a
ilreat many women who have toi nd a retuQo
for modesty. In his otter of FUELJ consult.!,
tlon by letter. It 11 correspondence Is held
as sacredly confidential. Address Dr. R. V.
Pierce, Buttalo, R. Y.
Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription restores and regulates
the womanly functions, abolishes pain and builds up and
putt the finishing touch of health on every weak woman
who gives it a fair trial.
It Makes Weak Women Strong,
Sick Women Well.
You can't afford to accept a secret nostrum aa a substitute
for this non-alcoholic medicine of known composition.
Chamberlin-John;, as mBose Co ipa
/Thirty Yeara Together.
T/Irty years of association—think ol
It. / How thu merit of a good thing
stands out in tlmUtlme—or thu worth
lessness of a bad one. So there's no
guesswork in this evidence of TIioh.
Ailss, Concord, Midi., who writes: “I
Have used I)r. King’s Now Discovery for
:I0 years, and It's the best cough an 1
cold ouro I ever used.” Oneo It finds
entrance ton home yon'nan’t pry it out.
aa^e PORATABLK AND *TATIONA*V
Engines
AND BOILERS
•Aaiu, FulUj*. Ba.tlns,Qaaolln# Bniinos.
aw*, 8 ™ 1 LOMBARD,
Huhist ini («« tint Ml Supjlj
aii&usta. da.
KILL the COUCH
and CURE THE LUNCS
Why is this, you ask? Simply this: Many families have used it fortv years.
It’s the most infallible throat nnd lung
medicine on earth. Unequalled fur la-
grlppo, asthma, hay-fever, croup,
quinsy or sore lungs.Price 50c, $1.00. j
Trial bottle free.|^Guaranteed by all
druggists.
wi ™ Dr. King’s
New Discovery
FOR C8i!gs H3 ajSfffi.
AND ALL THROAT AND LfJNGTROL'SI ES
that man knows the value of advertis
ing; knows his city and its advantages
like a book and armed with facts he is
as bold as a lion and can make you
think his way before you are hardly
i aware.
FE-RU-NA TONIC TOR
COUGHS, COLDS, CATARRH
“The Sins of The Father”.
iGUARANTEED SATISFACTORY
* OR MONEY REFUNDED. j
MILLEDGEVILLE BRICK WORKS-
J. W McMILLAN, Proprietor. Milledgeville, Ga.
One Million Brick
Now in Stock.
%
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 itnmedateij . Correspondence solicited.
foaaaasaae eaeeeaes
COMPARE
OUR BURIAL CASES AND
SUPPLIES WITH OTHERS. §
If our prices are not equally as low and our IJj
service far superior, then we wont ask for your
JIS business. 2n
S MILLEDGEVILLE BUGGY & FURNITURE CO. jig
||| RES. PHONES ISO AND 2*9.' STORE PHCNE SO.
©©aaaasaa aaaaaaaa
1’eruna Drug Co., Columbus, Ohio.
Gentlemen: I bare used I’eruntyi
and find tliut It caij£*t be equaled ah \
a tonic, as v ell as a«jve for coughn, f
cold* and catarrh. S
You are authorized to n«e rnv '
photo with testimonial in any pub- '
i licatlon. (
Joseph II. Chase, i
1 Tenth St., Washington, D. C, S
Cold and La Grippe.
Mr. C. Happy, Harcin, Ray Co., Mo.,
writes: “I can safely recommend 1'c-
rur.a as a romedy that will euro all ca
tarrhal troubles.
••It was of great benefit to me, as It
cured me of catarrh of the throat, am!
I took a very bad cold and lout la
grippe last February. It sotllod in my
throat and lungs. I took three bottles
of Pc-runa and ft cored iqe.
“X highly recommend It to all who
arc sick, and I am glad to add my en
dorsement to that of others.”
Pe-ru-na for Colds.
Mr. L. Clifford Figg, Jr., 2829 East
Marshall St., Richmond, Va., writes
that when he gets a cold he takes Pern-
pa. and ft soon drtvesltoutof hissy stein,
For several year3 ho was not entirely
well, but Peruna completely cured him.
People w ho object to liquip modioiuet
can now secure I’craas tablets.
The subject of “The Sins of the
Father” is so big anil vital —so immi
nent and pressing upon the' people of
the South —that Thomas Dixon did nrt
wait to put it into a novel, but attack
ed it directly by means of this play, j
He had a message to speak concerning ,
racial puritv, and he has spoken it with
out delaying or flinching. li comes, in!
Mr. Dixon's own words,.as a clarion call |
to the South to be true to her best j
traditions and save American civiliz- j
ation. A book amusei and interests,
but a play drives a message hums with
incomparably greater power. Those
who would witness the t.hifiling storv
Mr. Dixon has put in dramatic guise
and would learn the nature of his ex
traordinary message, will have their
opportunity at the opera house next
Saturday night Feb. 11th.
Wood’s Seeds
For The
farm arid Garden
have an established reputation
extending over thirty years, be
ing planted and used extensively
by the best Farmers and Garden
ers throughout the Middle and
Southern States.
Wood’s New for 1911 will
Seed Catalog £&»£ £
to what crops and seeds to plant
for success and profit. Our pub
lications have long been noted
for the full and complete infor
mation which they give.
Catalog mailed free on
request. Write for iL
T. W. WOOD €) SONS,
Seedsmen, > Richmond, Va.
Furniture
Greatly Reduceu
The completion of our
new building, which will be
the home of our Furniture
department, has been delay
ed. There is no space avail
able to exhibit the stock
i V
bought for the opening dis
play. Therefore, it is to be
closed out at prices very
much reduced. Out-of-town
people can pay for a trip to
Atlanta from the savings
made on Furniture for par
lor, bedroom, library or din
ing room.
Furniture of equal beauty
and character was never
before offered at such low
prices,
Ckamterlin-jionnson- DuB OSfc-Co
Wken yon are sick, or suffering from any of the
troubles peculiar to women, don’t delay—take Car-|
dui, that well-known and successful remedy for wo
men. Thousands of women have used Cardui and I
been benefited. Why not you? Don’t take any
chances. Get Cardui, the old, reliable, oft-tried.|
remedy, for women of all ages.
ITAKE
It Will Help You
J40
Mrs. Luzania Morgan, Snccdville, Tenn., writes: <f For ten I
[ years I sufTereil with the turn of life, and tried many remedies
without relief. I had pains all over my body %nd at times I could
not sit up. At lust I took Cardui and now 1 can do my housework.
I have told many ladies about Cardui and recommend it to all sick |
| women.” Try it.
AT ALL DRUG STORES
See us about good Printing