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Professional Cards.
e e s
QUINCEY & CHASTAIN,
Attorneys and Counselors At Law,
HAZLEHURST, GEORGIA.
King & Sellers,
W e it -LAWYERS
Will practice ?lix all the courts.
Office at the Gourt House,
HAZLEHURST, GA.
W
R. H. GREEN
Doctor of Dental Surgery.
HAZLEHURST, GA.
Chapman-Patrick Building.
————?—_'—_—
DR. J. M. CHRISTIAN,
PMHYSICIAN & SURGEON
Hazlohurst, - Qeorgia.
Office over ~Citizens’ Bank.
Office ’'phone, No. 54; residence
‘thone, No. 9.
Calls promptly answered day or
night.
JULIAN H. PARKER.
Lawyer
HAZLEHURST, GEORGIA.
PRIGE & GRANT,
Attorneys at Law
Hazlehurst, Georgia.
Practices in state and federal
courts. Collections a specialty. Of
fices over (Citizens’ Bank.
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The Queen of Fashions.
Richest and choicest creations are
most elegantly and perfectly repro
duced on the Standard Rotary.
The World’s Best Sewing
Machine.
The only machine which makes abso
lutely perfect lock and chain stitch
ing on the same machine,
Ladies.
When you are in need of a sewing
machine, you no doubt intend to give
the matter intelligent consideration
and should buy one which will last
8 lifetime, the Standard Rotary.
You Owe It to Yourself
Mo learn how the Standard Rotary
will do more and better work in less
time, and with more real comfort and
pleasure than any other machine
made. Send for circular.
The Standard Sewing Machine Co,,
Atlanta, Ga.
Agents wanted,
GEORGIA ANDFLORIDA RAILWAY
MAIN LINE.
Effective December 1, 1908.
ARRIVALS.
From Madison, Valdosta
i Douglas: ~ .0 L 09910 pm!
From Douglas and Brox
-801 el e 90 40amS
From Douglas and Brox-
RN - o w 1 00am Y
DEPARTURES.
For Douglas, Valdosta
. and Madison .. .. .. .. 5:25am!
¥or Broxton and Douglas 3:3opms
; For Broxton and Douglas 3:00pm?
‘ 'Daily. ?Daily except Sunday.
¢ sSunday only.
J. M. TURNER, General Manager.
A. POPE, Traffic Manager.
F._—._g‘-—-—-————-————‘———————-
Easy to Rescue William,
Our little William, aged four, is
very fond of cheese. One day he
heard his mother speaking about fish
ing for drowned persons and he in
stantly said: “Mother, if I get drown
ed, you won’t have any trouble fish
ing me out, if you bait the line with
cheese.”—The Delineator.
| 7 LABOR WORLD,
‘A project to organize a labor pro
tective league is on foot 'in Boston,
Mass.
A New England district council of
retall clerks’' unions was formed at n
convention of thirty-two of the
unions,
The Government of Hungary has
ordered the dissolution of the Unilon
of Rallway Workers and the confisca
tion of their funds, '
A great victory s recorded in fa
vor of industrial peace in Englatd By
the constitution of a conciliation
board for iron founders throughout
Lancashire,
The pronosed consolidation of the
Central Labor Union and the Federa
tion of Labor, of Brooklyn, N. Y,,
hag the anpearance of an accom
plished fact,
Cleveland (England) ironstone mi
ners have decided unanimously to
use every endeavor to obtain a five
per cent. advance in wages on the
present existing base rule.
John: Philip Sousa is to lead the
band of 400 men at the annual con
cert of Boston (Mass.) Musicians’
Protective Association, which will be
held Sunday, February 14.
Minnesgota railwav men are particu
larly interested in the proposed semi
monthly vnaydav bill and an employ
erg’ liability bill, and the union work
ingmen the State over are also anx
fous to secure both,
Sixteen locals were renresented at
a recent meeting to form the proposed
metal trades section of the Boston
(Mass.) C. L. U. Anoplication was
made to the A. F. of L. metal trades
department for the local charter.
The jurisdictional strife between
the Freight Handlers’ Union and the
Order of Railway Clerks was adjusted
by a joint agreement, each union
giving away on some points and ac
cepting a compromise on the mems
_—
The Oldest Inhabitant.
There is a man in New York who
before he went into vaudeville was
the impressario of a dime museum in
Boston, This was a good many years
ago, but he still tells of an experi
ence that befell him in his search
for novelties in the way of freaks,
says the New York Times.
“I read the paper the other day of
a man up in Maine who had just cel
ebrated his hundredth birthday, and
was still hale and hearty,” said Mr.
Keith, “I remember his name well.
It was Amos Whiffletree. I journeyed
to his farm and found him in the
early evening sitting on his stoop
smoking a pipe. I introduced myself
and asked if it were true that he
was 100 years old. He replied that
he was. I then made him an offer to
exhibit himself as the oldest man
alive.
“‘ guess you made a mistake, ain’t
ye?” he said. ‘You must be thinkin’
of my father.
“‘Your father!’ I gasped. ‘ls you
father alive?
“‘Surest thing you know, said
Amos.
“‘Where is he? I asked.
“‘He’s upstair putting grandpa to
bed,” replied Amos, refilling his pipe.
Headed Off.
“So you discovered the North Pole ”
“] can hardly claim that,” replied
Peary modestly, “but I was there.”
‘What do you mean?”
“Why, I found that a miner had
focted in from Alaska and was using
the pole as a stake at one corner of
his claim.”—Philadelphia TLedger.
THE WORLDS GREATEST SEWING MACHINE
LIGHT RUNNING
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pay I B 0 U
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Ifgou want eithera Vibrating Shuttle, Rotary
huttle or a Single Thread [Chain Stitch]
Sewing Machine write to
THE NEW HOME SEWING MACHINE COMPANY
Orange, Mass.
Many sewing machines are made to sell regardless of
quality, but the New Hlome is made to wear.
Our guaranty never runs out,
Sold by authorized dealers only.
FOR SALE BY
. AT 8 PERCENT
I secure loans on your
farm lands for any amount
~t “per cent interest.
Call and see me before you
boriow money. All loans
made promptly.
R. T. WILLIAMS.
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The 1909 Subscription
$1175 The Best Offer NMade f'opr ’the?(lf:‘:: Yeoear sln7s
THE TRI-WEEKLY ATLANTA CONSTITUTION
_—-— WA p—-—— 4
The Hazelhurst News
together with the superb FREE OFFERS of PARIS MODES, a woman’s
magazine; or THE SOUTHERN RURALIST; a splendid agricultural
paper; or TALKS FROM FARMERS TO FARMERS, an epitome l
of farm wisdom, worth its weight in gold. All for only 8 .
- 2 : Monday, Wednesday, Friday, three
Ib_e—.l_}l__w_eg_‘sly cons'htu'tlon times a week. The newsiest, best,
brightesi, and biggest Southern Newspaper.
Almost a Daily, yet at the price of a Weekls. MM
or. The Weekly Constituticn—once a week, with each of the above (except that
The Weekly Constitution is substituted for the Tri-Weekly)—all for one year for only $1.40
The Tri-Weekly Constitution presents at one sweeping view the whole area of events. The
news of the country, state, nation, and the world is given in each complete issue. Each week
the departments of Farm and Farmers, Woman’s Kingdom, Great Agricultural South, Farm
ers’ Union, Rural Free Delivery, Poultry and others of wide interest, edited by experts,
appeal directly to those addressed. '
The Weekly Constitution contains all these special features and the difference between it
and The Tri-Weekly is that the one is issued once a week (on Monday only) and the
other three times a week—Monday, Wednesday and Friday.
If you want the Constitution alone, without any clubbing offers, you can get the Tri-Weekly
Constitution at $1 per year, or The Weekly at soc per year, by addressing The Constitution,
Atlanta, Ga. One sample copy sent free on request, giving with it six of your neighbors.
THE CONSTITUTION IS THE PAPER
FOR RURAL FREE DELIVERY ROUTES
‘A club of 40 or 50 or more will keep an R. F. D. route above the minimum average required
for daily mail service. It is the great news purveyor of the whole Southland, as good in
the gulf states as on the Atlantic seaboard.
Clubbed with The Atlanta Constitution, we have the superb FREE OFFERS shown
from which you may make your choice of one:
(1) Talks From Farmers to Farmers, a symposium of Southern farm knowledge that
should be in the hands of every practical farmer, young or old. The articles have all ap
peared in Tri-Weekly Constitution under same title and made one of the greatest features of
this splendid farmers’ paper. It will be mailed to you immediately upon receipt of order.
(2) The Southern Ruralist, one of the best agricultural papers in the south. It is a
semi-monthly edited by a farmer on his own farm, and is intensely practical and helpful.
(3) Paris Modes, a woman’s magazine, monthly. There are fashions in it, as the title
indicates, and they are right up to date. Do not think they are all of the sylph-like, hipless,
clothes-pin styles of the extreme devotees of the changeable flirt called “Fashion.” They
are all pretty and becoming and up to date, so that the ladies’ may feel well-dressed and in
the style who follow them. But you get more than mere fashions. There are stories, poems,
storyettes, incidents of travel, seasonable articles for entertainments, home keeping, cookery,
care of the person, sanitation and hygiene, plant culture and all the rest that go to make up
a monthly feast for the busy woman who reads as she works, who relaxes from one task and
finds charm in’the ever-varying features of woman’s work that is said to be never done,
: OUR GREAT PROPOSITION
* Remember, our paper one year, and THE TRI-WEEKLY CONSTITUTION, Mon
day, Wednesday and Friday, three times a week, for one year, and your selection of one
from the three alternate free offers, all for $1.75; or the whole combination (except that The
Weekly Constitution is substituted for the Tri-Weekly) for 0n1y... v.e vew ov. ...$1.40
Send at once. Get right on. Don’t miss a copy. Address all orders for above com
bination to : ; e
Y 2
.+ THE HAZLEHURST NEWS, Hazlehurst, Ga. -