Newnan herald & advertiser. (Newnan, Ga.) 1909-1915, February 18, 1910, Image 1

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l When we shall have on exhibit more than six hun dred styles of the latest effedts in foreign and do mestic fabrics for men’s wear, and fashion plates showing all the neweSt Styles in spring clothing. We cordially invite you to be present. We know of no way in which the finest grade of high-class men’s tailoring can be obtained as satisfactorily and as cheaply at this. The cloths shown represent the very best materials; the workmanship is superior hand-tailoring, by master-mechanics. One of SCHLOSS BROS. & CO.’S Expert Cutters and Fitters who is a specialist of fashions will be on hand to show you the newest fabrics and styles; to demonstrate the Schloss Tailoring System, and to take orders. His advice Will be most valuable. All orders are sent to the Schloss Tailor Shops in Baltimore and made up in the finest way. Even if you have no intention of ordering now,' we urge you to call and meet this specialist, whose services are entirely free and at your disposal during the days mentioned above. Be sure to come in while he is here. Gnttism & Gm GEORGIA VOL. XLV.’ Flour Season Now is the .time to buy your flour. We have kept our eye on the market, and bought heavily be fore the rise. Therefore, we can sell you flour at the right prices, either for Gash or on Time. HEAVY STOCK GEORGIA RIBBON CANE SYRUP.—-In 5 and 10-gallon cans and half-barrels. We have the best syrup that can be bought. SEED OATS.—Texas Rust Proof Oats. Day Burt Oats. 90- FEEDSTUFF.—Alfalfa corn, ground feed, feed oats, corn, hay, bran and shorts—all bought in car load lots. COFFEE.—The best bulk roasted coffee, and more of it for your money than you can get any where. i PLOW GOODS.— Hames, traces, collars, best and heaviest single plow-stocks, bridles, breeching, and lines. We sell the Hutcheson plow-lines. SHOES.—Best work shoes for men, women and children. IN FACT, we are prepared in every way to sup ply all needs for man or beast for making your crops. Would be glad to have you call and get our prices both cash and on time. T. G. Farmer & Sons Co. 19 Court Square :: 6 and 8 W. Wakinyton ' Telephone 147 SOME DAYS. Some dayB the road seems long—so long— The burden hard to bear: And life has lost the lilt of song— No gladness anywhere. But that’s the time brave henrts should wako And fill the world with cheer; Across the gloom the sun will break And sorrow disappear. If all the dayB were happy days ~And all the nights were sweet With dreamB where careless fancy strays. And happiness complete— The fires of fate would never prove Our courage to withstand Misfortune, and our dearest love Would bear an empty hand. Only After Real Trouble Comes. Chicago Tribune. You don't know how happy you are in your everyday normal condition un til old Trouble comes along and hits you a tremendous whack. And, since you never know when this unwelcome gentleman will make a call, it is just as well to enjoy yourself while you can. Annoyances are everywhere, outside of paradise. You can’t escape them and be healthy. You are bound to have a certain amount of unhappiness and there is no need worrying about it until it arrives. Most of the misery we experience is in anticipating trouble,and then talking about it for ten years after it’s all over with. There is a whole lot in knowing how to live just right—and even after you know, it's even harder to live it. We can just do our best, be as cheer ful and happy as the law allows, and when Trouble, comes hanging around the corners meet him like a man. When he gives you ; a whack, jump up and smile and say to yourself: “To morrow, my dear, to-morrow.” Just remember that all troubles, like plenty of bad people, get to the end of their rope when given tin e enough. Let, them disappear naturally. Don’t carry them on your face, show ing thbm to an unsympathetic world, which bas heart griefs of its own, and doesn’tigive a single solitary rap for all of your\ sufferings. And all these old troubles about which you are fretting and making yourself.<old and wretched and disagree able willj one day be completely wiped off the calendar of your years. There Vs nothing like a tew good, hard, knockout blows from Trouble to bring out one’s resources. Some great sorrow is surely essential to the humanizing of every soul. Never until we have experienced deep sorrow ourselves can we offer but lip sympathy to those who have gasped through the sea of trouble. They who have known only days of comparative prosperity cannot interpret the despairing sigh of the friendless. They who have never dropped tears into the graves of their own dead can not measure the agony of that last, lin gering look, as they are hidden forever from sight. Be courageous. Force yourself to be pleasant and say the bright things that come to your lips. Hard? Of course it is! But it’s a good fight, this one against allowing one’s grief to be submerged in personal griefs, and out of it you can come a conqueror if you will. Not one of us can learn to become light-hearted in a day, or a week, or a month, or a year, for it is the lesson of life—this knowing how to lift up our hearts and smile, and work on, when Trouble has given us a knockout blow. But there is always a remedy for a heavy heart. It may be good, hard, all-absorbing work—it oftenest is. It may be in thinking out joys that have been given to youf and the sor rows from which you have been saved. It may be in helping others by sym pathy, or in whatever help is most needed. It may be in forgetting self entirely, and in remembering and relievlhg the needs of others as far as possible. It may be in thinking of what you have in life that is good. It may be in thinking out what the future has to hold for you until yoilr heart grows light and the world seems full of sunshine. No one has a right to make his grief a burden to the rest of the world. We all have the privilege of working out and overcoming our sorrows. Fate grants us that much. It is only the worker who knows the blissful possibilities of an idle hour, as only one who has suffered knows the true value of happiness. But, above all, do not be one of the people who insist on sprinkling mustard on fresh wounds of grief or disappoint ment, loss or failure, by reminding them and suggesting remedies. If. you would only let them alone and be cheerful and sympathetic, you would give them real help. One word of encouragement is worth a volume of sympathy. The one in trouble does not need your tears, while your smiles are a fortune of cheer. The kindest thing we can do for peo ple in great grief is not to refer to its causes. To try and keep their minds away from it, to cheer them, and through kindness and love call them away from their sorrow. Was there ever a sorrow in that man’s or woman’s life? one often asks oneself as he looks upon a face beaming with smiles. Was there ever a moment when, for that man or that woman, a sorrow threw over the wide earth the pall of unrest? y Have they ever wept and sighed, or clasped their hands in anguish? 'Those who know life never ask those questions, for they know how much fire may be hidden under a lava-crusted exterior; that there are divers masks worn in this harlequin world of ours; that there are few whom trouble has not given a whack. SPECIAL NOTICE. Of Importance to the People of Newnan. Brown & Brooks desire to announce to the readers of The Herald and Ad vertiser that they have been able to se cure the agency for Parisian Sage, the marvelous dandruff cure and delightful hair dressing. Brown & Brooks are glad to state that Parisian Sage is a rigidly guaran teed hair invigorator. It cures dandruff in two weeks by killing the dandruff microbes; it stops falling hair, itching scalp and splitting hair or money back. It is a most pleasant hair dressing, especially for ladies, as it causes the hair to grow in thickly and makes it luxuriant and lustrous. The price is only 60 cents a large bottle at Brown & Brooks’. WORTHY OF CONFIDENCE. An Offer Backed by One of Our Most Reputable Concerns. We pay for all the medicine used dur ing the trial, if our remedy fails to completely relieve you of constipation. We take all the risk. You are not obli gated to us in any way whatever, if you accept our offer. That's a mighty broad statement, but we mean every word of it. Could anything be more fair for you? A most scientific, common-sense treat ment is Rexall Orderlies, which are eat en like candy. Their active principle is a recent scientific discovery that is odor less, colorless and tasteless; very pro nounced, gentle and pleasant in action, and particularly agreeable in every way. This ingredient does not cause diarrhoea, nausea, flatulence, griping or any in convenience whatever. Rexall Order lies are particularly good for children, aged and delicate persons. If you suffer from chronic or habitual constipation, cr the associate or depen dent chronic ailments, we urge you to try Rexall Orderlies at our risk. Re member, you can get them in Newnan only at our store. 12 tablets 10 cents; 36 tablets 25 cents. The Rexall Store —Holt & Cates Co. For sale in Palmetto, Ga., b> T. E. Culbreath. They were talking, the little group of agents, canvassers and “yellow dog” distributors, about the words insurance and assurance, some claiming that the first and some, that the second was the better word to use. But with a scornful laugh a Boston agent in gold-rimmed spectacles said: “You are all very ignorant. Insur ance is no better and no worse than as surance. Each has a special signifi cance, and each is equally good in its place. “The place for assurance is where precaution is taken against a certainty —against, that is, death. Life assur ance, we should say, if we spoke with perfect correctness. “The place for insurance is where precaution is taken, against an uncer tainty, such as fire, shipwreck, burgla ry. Fire insurance, marine insurance, we should say.” NEWNAN, GA., FRIDAY, FEBRUARY & ADVERTISER