Newspaper Page Text
-u.-*-* ../~4 I- - V., -
'v KWMUMH*
—
—
-f'A
fjerald and Advertiser.
NEWNAN, FRIDAY,
FEB. 11.
ONE DOLLAR A
YEAR.
Some Types of Men.
Beatrice Fairfax.
The mother of sixteen children is su
ing her husband for divorce. Non-sup-
port is the plea.
For thirty-live years she has been a
good wife to that man, and she has
borne him sixteen children; now he re
fuses to support her. Could anything
be more contemptible?
Her youth and strength have been
used up in his service; now he turns to
some woman who is probably younger
and prettier.
He is an old man, but ho would like
his wife to bejyoung and sprightly.
Another man of sixty haB juBt mar
ried a girl of eighteen. The girl could
not have married him for love; nothing
but money would induce a young girl to
mate with a man old enough to be her
grandfather.
If thatjman wanted a’wife he should
have chosen one somewhere near his
own age.
The chances are that his “child wife”
will lead him a pretty dance.
A young man of twenty-one writes
that he iB madly in love with a woman
ten years his senior, and asks if I think
he will ever regret it if he marries her.
My answer is that he most certainly
will regret it within five years. Sooner
or later, he is bound to fall in love with
some one near his own age. At pres
ent he mistakesjinfatuation for love.
“It’B dead easy to fool a woman,” I
overheard a young man declare the oth
er day.
1 was sitting with'my back to him, so
I could not sec what kind of man it waB
who made this confident assertion, but
I am quite sure he is not the kind of
man who could ever fool a woman for
one instant; he is too sure of himself.
Just wherein the honor and glory lies
in fooling a woman I do not see.
Perhaps it is eaBy to fool a woman
who loves and trusts you; she wants to
believe; so her heart sometimes over
comes her judgment. '
But, do you feel especially proud of
yourself when you deceive your wife or
mother or sweetheart?
Sometimes the woman is not as much
fooled as you think she is; it merely
suits her to lot you think yourself a
master of diplomacy. In the long run
the fooling is reversed.
Then there is the man who imagines
that women do not mind risque stories
and vulgar jokes. Ho is usually an old
ish man, and if he could for one mo
ment see himself ns women see him he
would forego his odious ways. He is as
bad as the “masher,” and or.o can’t
say more than that.
Do you know the type of man of
whom every one, from the grandmother
to the baby, Btands in awe? He is good
and honest and a tyrant. Ho never
lookB at another woman than his wife,
but his wife does not really know him,
and she stands in awe of him; so does
his mother.
The children aro afraid of him, and
yet he works hard to provide a good
homo for them, t
There are thousands of types of men,
just as there aro of women.
While it is often impossible to prr-
vent an accident, it is never impossible
to he prepared -it. is not beyond any one’s
purse. Invest 25 cents in a bottle of
Chamberlain's Liniment and you are
j rspared for sprains, bruises and like
injuries. Sold by all dealers.
A Lincoln Penny for Lee.
Charleston Newt and Courier,
She was only a little girl, and she did
not know much abouf history except
that dtie had been taught from the cra
dle to love Robert E. Lee, She had
heard, too, of Lincoln, and in the books
she read there had been no attempt to
paint him as a treacherous vlllian. She
knew that one time he had been Presi
dent of the United States and that
somehow he and Lee had been arrayed
against each other. She did not under
stand it—perhaps she never will—but
both men to her were great and clean
and spotless.
On Lee’B birthday at one of the pub
lic Bchools of this city the children wish
ed to contribute to a fund for a monu
ment to him. They brought their little
savings and gave them cheerfully, glad
to be able to do even so little in honor
of their hero—the South’s hero. This
one little girl had only one penny, and
when it came time to give that she
hesitated. She had not thought of it
before, but suddenly it occurred to her
that she must beware lest she commit
an impropriety. “Please, teacher,” she
said, “will it be all right forme to give
a Lincoln penny?"
We cannot all give Lincoln pennies
that will count as that one did. How
wondrously did that little gift express
the feelings of the great mass of Amer
icans! The coin with the head of the
war President was to be used to assist
in the erdetion of a monument to the
great Confederate leader in that time
of war, and who can doubt that Lincoln
and Lee, if they Baw the deed, felt
that they had neither gone through the
strife in vain? "Out of the mouths of
babes and sucklings” come the answer
to the years of toil. This single Lincoln
penny was worth more than any great
sum of money because of the simplicity
of the lesson It taught and the magna
nimity of the spirit which it manifest
ed.
Do you know that croup can be pre
vented? Give Chamberlain’s Cough
Remedy as soon as the child becomes
hoarae, or even after .the croupy cough
appears, and it will prevent the attach.
It is also a certain cure for croup and
has never been known to fail. Sold by
ull dealers.
Own Your Own Mind.
Have you ever considered the possi
bility of doing this? Remember that liv
ing in a rented mind, furnished with
opinions bought on tha installment plan,
never offers any inducement with it for
the future. Not only this, but you are
not saving up anything.
The advantage of owning your own
mind will bo apparent at a moment’s
thought.
In the first place, you come to take a
personal interest, which you do not
feel when it is owned by some one else.
Then, again, the natural increase in
value redounds to your profit. You have
no one to Indicate to you as to the in
side furnishings and decorations. Be
sides, it makes you more particular with
regard to what you put into it. If you
live in a rented mind, you don’t care
much. You will drive nails in the walls,
and get generally careless about it.
But when you own your own mind, you
are constantly going about picking it
up. You take real pride in it.
But it ever so humble, there is no
place like a mind that you own your
self.
Sore Lungs and Raw Lungs.
Most people know the feeling, and
the miserable state of ill health it in
dicates. , All people should know that
Foley’s Honey and Tar, the greatest
throat and lung remedy, will quickly
cure the soreness and cough and restore
a normal condition. Ask for Foley’s
Honey and Tar. Sold by all druggists.
Things a Mother Should Not Do.
Huufluliold Magazine.
She should not forget that if she
treats her boy as a gentleman Bhe will
do much towards making him a gentle
man.
She should not treat her boy to per
petual frowns, scoldings, and fault
findings. “Sugar attracts more flies
than vinegar. ” Love wins her boy to
a noble manhood.
She should never be so busy or hard-
pressed for time that she cannot listen
to him. If he lives to be a man he will
all too soon leave her. She should
make the most of him while she has
him.
She should encourage outdoor exor
cise or sports, and she should not for
got to train him with proper regard for
his personal appearance.
She should never allow him to form
Buch habits as coming to the table in
his shirt-sleeves, neglecting his nails or
teeth, or carrying soiled handkerchiefs
about him.
She should never nag him, or forget
that he is a creature of reason, not an
animal that requires to be driven.
She should not try to break her boy’s
will, but be thankful that he is manly
enough to have a mind of his own and
devote himself to training it to the no
blest uses.
She should not fail-to instill in him a
distaste for all that is vulgar.
Escaped Drugs, But Booze Got Him.
Detroit, Jan. 25.—Hugh Cannon, who
wrote “Goo-Goo Eyes,” "Ain’t That a
Shame,” "Bill Riley,” and other classics
of the rag-time order was sent to the
poor-house yesterday at the age of 36.
He told a pathetic story of his life in
short, expressive sentences.
“I quit coke easy,” he said. “I hit
the pipe in New York for a year and
stopped that. I went up against mor
phine hard, and quit; but booze, red,
oily booze—that’s got me for keeps.
Except for seven months on the water
wagon, I’ve been pickled most of the
time. ”
Idleness and Girls.
Newark New*.
There are certain laws that apply to
mental processes with which everyone
is familiar. One of them relates to
the danger of idleness and its use by
an individual whose name is not men
tioned in polite society.
There i3 no class of people so apt to
do foolish and imprudent things as the
girls who have nothing to occupy their
minds. The girl who has to work for
a living is really safer than the
who is under no such compulsion,
a girl has no serious interests, her
tore is largely dependent upon the
cretion and discernment of her parents
or guardians.
The Philadelphia girl who ran away
with a hotel waiter,- according to re
ports, has been forgiven. From what
is known to the public concerning the
case, she should have been. But has
she forgiven her guardians? She*is
not so much to blame as those who
neglected to take care of her. If her
life had been normal she would not
have been seized by the notions that
have drawn a cloud over her life.
Treat Your
Skin Now
with the delightful E. Burnham Toilet
Requisites. They will render your
complexion exemptfrom any ill effects
of exposure to the wind or the sun.
E. Burnham’, Cucumber end Elder
Flower Cream 50c and $1.00
E. Burnham’s Hygienic Skin Food... 1.00
E. Burnham’s Course Pore Lotion... 1.00
E. Burnham's Developing Cream.... 1.00
E. Burnham's Liiiozone (Hoad
Whitener) .25
E. Burnham’s Initantaneons Skin
Bleaching 2.50
E. Burnham’s Medicated Complexion
Powder, (4 Shodes) .50
E. Burnham’s Imperceptible Rouge
Stick
E. Burnham HairTonic 50c and 1.00
Gray Hair Restorer 1.00
"BO Preparations'*
c
CHICAGO. ILL.
For Sale by All Dealers.
„ your dealer cannot supply you send 10
cents (for mailing) for samples and booklet.
one
If
fu-
dis-
No Backache or Kidney Pains.
If you have pains in the back, urina
ry, bladder or kidney trouble, dizziness
and lack of energy, try Mother Gray’s
Australian-Leaf, the pleasant herb cure.
As a regulator it has no equal. At
druggists, or by mail, 50c. Ask to-day.
Sample free. Address The Mother Gray
Co., LeRoy, N. Y.
J. Pierpont Morgan, at the recent di
ocesan convention in New York, amused
a group of clergymen with a story of a
minister:
“He was as ignorant, this good man,
of financial matters,” said Mr. Mor
gan, “as the average financier is igno
rant of matters ecclesiastical.
“He once received a check—thefirst
he had ever got in his life—and took it
to a bank for payment.
“ ‘But you must indorse the check,
said the paying teller, returning it
through his little window.
“ ‘Indorse it?’ Said the'old minister,
in a puzzled tone.
“ ‘Yes, of course. It must be in
dorsed on the back. ’
“ ‘I see,’ said the minister. And,
turning the check over, he wrote across
the back of it;
“ ‘I heartily indorse this check.’ ” —
St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
The grub who fancies himself a but
terfly exploits his limitations at the
first flight.
After The Grippe
“I am much pleased, to be able to write and thank
you for what Cardui has done for me,” writes Mrs. Sarah
]. Gilliland, of Siler City, N. C.
“Last February, 'I fiad the Grippe, which left me in
bad shape. Before that, I had been bothered with female
trouble, for ten years, and nothing seemed to cure it
“At last, I began to take .Cardui. I have taken only
three bottles, but it has done me more good than all the
doctors or than any-other medicine I ever took.”
“What are they moving the church
for?”
i go
saloon shall be .nearer
from a church. I give
to move the church. ”
8 no
than 800 feet
em three days
Seeing a first-class novel on the bar
gain counter is enough to take the ro
mance out of it.
Take
J 42
The Womans Tonic
An attack of grip is often followed
by a persistent cough, which to many
proves a great annoyance. Chamber
lain’s Cough Remedy has been exten
sively used and with good success for
the relief and cure of this cough. Many
cuses have been cured after all other
remedies had failed. Sold by all dealers.
“How do you intend to spend New
Year’s Day?” was asked of a confirmed
old bachelor who has luxurious rooms
in a big city hotel.
“Oh, about as usual. I will visit sev
eral of my married friends, take notes
of their little worries and watch the
antics of their irrepressible children.
I will probably have ice cream poured
into my hat and sticky candies hid in
my coat pockets. I will see frowns on
the faces of the husbands and added
wrinkles in the eyes of the pretty wives
of a few years ago.
“Then I will come back to my cozy
bachelor quarters, and over a quiet
glass of wine and a good cigar I will
swear off matrimony for another year.
Have done it for twenty years now and
never regretted it, and I guess I’ll keep
right along in the same old way.”
More people are taking Foley’s Kid
ney Remedy every year. It is consid
ered the most effective remedy for all
kidney and bladder troubles that medi
cal science can devise. Foley’s Kidney
Remedy corrects irregularities, builds
up the system and restores lost vitali
ty. Sola by all druggists.
Excursion Fares via Central of Georgia
Railway.
To New Orleans, La. —Account annual
session Ancient. Arabic Order Nobles
Mystic Shrine, to be held April 12-13,
For further information in regard to
total rates, dates of sale, limit; etc.,
apply to nearest ticket agent.
Sin may be ugly, but it often takes
to beauty culture.
For the after-effects of any serious illness, like the
Grip, Cardui is the best tonic you can use.
It builds strength, steadies the nerves, improves the
appetite, regulates irregularities and helps bring back the
natural glow of health.
Cardui is your best friend, if you only knew it
Think of the thousands of ladies whom Cardui has
helped! What could possibly prevent it from helping you?
Remember you cannot get the benefit of the Cardui
ingredients in any other medicine, for they are not for sale
in any drug store except in the Cardui bottle. Try Cardui.
Write to: Ladles* Advisory Dept., Chattanooga Medicine Co., Chattanooga, Tenn.,
lor Special Instructions, and 64-page book, "Home Treatment for Women.” sent free.
Armour’s
Fertilizers
Have four sources of ammonia. They
feed your crop through the entire grow
ing season.
They will be sold at every shipping-
point in this county.
Next week we will tell you in this
paper why they are the best goods to
be had.
Armour Fertilizer Works
ATLANTA, GEORGIA
For Sale by R. W. HAMRICK, H. C. GLOVER CO.
and F. H RED WINE.
CUBES OLD
• BLOOD TROUBLES
Contagious Blood Poison is at the bottom of a great
many old blood troubles. The disease may have been
contracted years ago and some treatment used that re
moved the outward symptoms and shut the virus up in
the system to slumber in the blood, but it only awaited a
favorable opportunity to break out in some form again.
Certain forms of catarrhal troubles, especially where
the bones are affected, scrofulous affections, non-healing
sores, ulcerated membranes, etc., are due to this specific
poison. Perhaps many who are afflicted in this way are
ignorant of the fact that the seeds of this mighty poison
are still hidden in the blood. Like the deadly serpent,
which is dangerous as long as the faintest spark of life is
left to enable it to pink its poisonous fangs, this powerful
disease will corrupt and defile while the least particle of
its insidious virus remains in the blood.
Tlie best time to get rid of Contagious Blood Poison is when the disease
is first contracted, and before its virus so penetrates the blood as to cause
ulcerated mouth and throat, copper-
colored spots, falling hair, etc. Then
of course the victim is saved much
humiliation and suffering; but 'Even
after the poison has become established
in the system it can be removed and a
cure effected if the blood be thoroughly
purified with S. S. S.
S. S. S. is the greatest of all blood
purifiers. It possesses penetrating
powers that enable it to go down into
the blood, and remove the last trace of
blood poison. It cures all blood
troubles simply and solely because it
removes the cause from the circulation.
Not only does S. S. S. cure cure Conta
gious Blood Poison when first contracted, but reaches it in any of its stages,
even where the trouble has been inherited. S. S. S. is made entirely of roots,
herbs and barks, and does not contain the slightest trace-of mineral in any
form. You canget rid of your old blood trouble if you will take S. S. S. and
allow it to purify the blood. Book on the blood and any medical advice free.
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA.
A PERFECT CURE.
Some olprht years ago I was in-
ooulated with poison by a nurse
who infeoted. my babe with blood
taint. I was covered with sores
and ulcers from head to foot. No
language oan express my feelings
of woe during these long years. I
was advised by friends who had
seen wonderful cures made by it,
to try S.S.B. We got Borne and I
improved from the start, and a
complete and berfeot cure was the
result. S. S.S. is the only blood
remedy whiob reaches desperate
oases of old blood troubles.
MBS. T. W. LEE.
Isle of of Hope, Savannah, Ga.
Pictures Framed
Come Ini!!
Bring in those art subjects
orunframed pictures that you
wish framed up—let us give
you our estimate onthe.cost of
the work.
Every late idea in excellent
mouldin'gs is shown here—ev
erything for the correct framing
in appropriate, artistic effects.
Prices are always low.
Scroggin Furniture Company
60 lbs. best Flour in town, without exception - - ■< $2.00
50 tbs. “Woodroof’s Leader,” and good enough
for anybody 1.75
50 Tbs. good Patent Flour - -- -- -- -- - 1.50
IS lbs. best standard Granulated Sugar ----- 1.00
7 lbs. good Roasted Coffee, (fresh,) ------ 1.00
Three 2-Ib. cans Tomatoes - -- -- -- -- - .26
2- lt). can best Elberta Peaches - -- -- -- -- .10
3- tt>. can best Elberta Peaches 15c., or two cans - - .25
Fresh brown Shorts for stock, per cwt. ------ 1.75
Fresh'white Shorts for cakes or bread - ----- 2.10
Everything in the way of Hay, Com, Oats, Meal,
Meat, Canned Goods and Crackers; Boots and Shoes; heavy
Checks and Cottonades; Sheetings and Shirtings of the best;
Grass Blades and Snathes, and ail kinds of Farmers’ Hard
ware. * >
. No trouble to show goods or make prices. Come and
see us. /
W00DR00F SUPPLY COMPANY
WHEN IN NEED OF
LUMBER AND PLANING
MILL STUFF
Of all kinds—Brackets, Mouldings, Columns, etc.—you will
find it to your interest to give us a call.
HOUSE BILLS A SPECIALTY
Vulcanite Roofing
R. D.Cole ManufacturingCo
49-54 E. Broad St., NEWNAN, GA.. ’Phone 14.