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EWNAN HERALD & ADVERTISER
VOL. XLV.l
NEWNAN, GA.,
lour 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 Cash or on Time.
HEAVY STOCK GEORGIA RIBBON CANE
lYRUP.—In $ and 10-gallon cans and half-barrels,
"e have the best syrup that can be bought.
SEED OATS—Texas Rust Proof Oats. 90-
ay Burt Oats.
FEEDSTUFF.—Alfalfa corn, ground feed/ feed
ts, corn, hay, bran and shorts—all bought in “car-
ad lots.
COFFEE.—The best bulk roasted coffee, and
jfore of it for your money than you can get any-
lere.
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-
fly all needs for man or beast for making your
:rops. Would be glad to have you call and get our
)rices both cash and on time.
T. fi. Farmer & Sons Co.
19 Court Square : : 6 and 8 W. Washington
Telephone 147
'.jat
COME ON NOWAND
GET A GOOD BUGGY.
FRIDAY,
MARCH 11, 1910.
NO. 24.
X)
Get a Barnesville or White
Star, as you' may prefer.
Have just received two car
loads of these buggies, and
we hardly have room for
so many. In this lot we
have anything you need in
the buggy line. Also a
complete stock of harness
of all kinds. CNow is the
time for anew White Hick
ory wagon. Get one now
and begin farming right.
This is the best wagon for
all purposes on the market.
CSee us before buying a
buggy, wagon or harness.
We will take pleasure in
showing our line to you.
H. C. ARNALL MDSE. CO.
’Phones 58 and 342.
A DREAM OP THE RANGE.
Last night I dreamed of* a sea of hills,
In a vesture of brown and dun:
And the red light poured, in a thousand rills,
Down the Bides of every one.
The purple shadows settled deep
In the hollows, in the west;
And I heard the voices of calling sheep
As they sought their place of rest.
And I felt the touch of a cool, kind wind,
That sprang from the peaks afar;
And overhead, though scarco defined.
Came the gleam of a sentinel star.
No stress of the market-place was hero
In the vast whero I lay me down:
Alnsl that I waked from that dream of cheer
To the hoarse summons of the town l
DREAM IS NEAR REALIZATION.
Holy Land Open to Jews, and They
are Returning to Old Home of
Their Race in Large Num
bers.
That long-cherished dream of the race
of Moses to return to its home, historic
Palestine, seems to have been suddenly
and unexpectedly brought nearer to
realization by the coming of the new
regime in Turkey.
For centuries it has been the dream
of leaders of the race to lead them back
again to the country that gave it birth,
and was once the home of the chosen
people.
The persecutions visited on the race
of Moses by the people of all nations
had much to do perhaps with the origin
of the plan, and the idea of haying
refuge, of creating a hospice where the
poor and oppressed Jews of all countries
could flock, and have comfort and safe
ty, has animated successive genera
tions of Jews.
Out of the movement proceeded the
mighty Zionist Society, which has en
rolled in its ranks many of the foremost
Hebrew educators of the world, and
contributions from the moneyed Jews
of all countries have steadily poured into
the coffers of the fund to carry the
-dream nearer to realization.
But always in the way of progress
stood one fatal obstacle, the attitude of
the Turkish government.
Centuries of bitter warfare over the
Holy Land, hundreds of years of strife
in which the blood of Christian, Jew and
Moslem alike, fell in struggles over the
holy ground which saw the life and
passion of the greatest figure of faith
as it is known in the new world, made
the Turk tenacious of his rights as cus
todian oi' the Palestine.
Toward the Jew the Turk had only
feelings of the most intense antagonism
His one desire was to tear down the
Hebrew, to humble him, to oppress him
and slaughters past description in their
ferocity have testified the hatred of the
Moslem for the children of David.
Plans were proposed to break this
fanatical opposition on the part of the
Turk to the plan for making Palestine
once more the home of the Jew. Money
in liberal amount was raised and the will
ingness of the leaders of the Jewish
race to buy concessions was proved on
more than one occasion.
But nothing availed until the coming
of a new era for Turkey.
The young Turks have given the an
swer. The party of progress in the land
of the Sublime Porte has decreed that
the age of unreasoning hatred is past.
If the Jews want to come in they are
welcome. Nothing stands between
them and the rulers of the land. The
prejudice of centuries has been hammer
ed down, and the newly created country
will receive its ancient victim and ene
my in terms of amity and justice.
It is for that reason that Palestine is
seeing such an influx of Jews as as
tounds even those who were piominent
in the Zionist movement and know the
sentiment of the Hebrew in favor of
the place of his past glories.
It is said that as a result of this new
ly stirred movement that the population
of Jerusalem, now about one hundred
thousand, is made up of four-fifths
Jews, and the number is constantly be
ing increased by incoming arrivals.
But Jerusalem is small. It would not
suffice to hold in comfort a percentage
of the number of people of David whv
are coming home.
Moreover, to huddle them in this an
cient city would be to defeat the plans
of the Jewish philanthropists who never
intended to repeat in the Old World the
congestion of city life that they desired
their Jewish bretheren to go to Pales
tine to escape.
It is with the thought of building up
a farming population, of getting the
Jew out in the country, that the Zionist
movement is being promulgated.
At Jaffa, Tiberias, Safed and Haifa
the Jews are reckoned by the tens of
thousands, and almost the whole ex
tensive plain of E3draedon has been
bought up by them.
, Their prosperous colonies are spread
ing from Dan to Beeraheba, and even
further south into the outskirts of
Egypt ov.-r country every foot of which
hap played ts part in Jewish history.
Every p from OJessa car. : es thou
sands of o-i am, and from Persia is corn
ing ii i of those who seek 10 gain
shelter, p oteciion and happiness in the
Holy Land.
It is a curious fact that it irf now to
this very land from which they were
driven in suffering and anguish they
now return to find a hospice.
Syndicates of Jewish capitalists and
especially representatives of the Zionist
movement are making special efforts to
obtain the Valley of the Jordan.
It is an ironic circumstance that thiB
was the property of the much dreaded
Sultafi Abdul Hamid, whose brutality in
his treatment uf the Jewish race made
Mb name infamous the world over.
It is one of the nicest tracts of coun
try to be found anywhere in the world;
and it is colonizing juBt as fast as the
land can be obtained.
As a result of this big movement the
Holy City itself, Jerusalem, has already
begun to take on a thoroughly Jewish
character.
Banking as well as trade and com
merce is virtually in the hands of the
Jews, and the government has found it
necessary to organize a company of
Jewish gendarmes.
The younger Jews have welcomed a
chance to serve in this company, believ
ing that it will have the effect of culti
vating a national and militant spirit
among the representatives of the Jew
ish race that will have the effect of add
ing to the patriotic spirit of the peo
ple.
Europe and America are steadily sup
porting in every possible way the move
ment in the interest of returning to
the Holy Land and getting a successful
system of colonization established
there.
Hundreds of thousands of dollars are
being sent in from all points to aid the
erection of public enterprises such as
hospitals, homes and other public work,
More than 100 Jewish schools already
exist in Jerusalem alone. Synagogues
are rising up everywhere. The value of
land has risen fourfold.
The modern agricultural implements
and methods of the Jewish settler have
made the land produce harvests never
before dreamed of by the natives. A
Zionist banking and commercial enter
prise is pushing the cause of Israel with
splendid determination.
The racial exclusiveness of the Jews
is arousing the opposition of Ottomans,
The Turkish constitutional regime
has in this question one of the greatest
problems that it has ever faced.
Father.
Boy Adopts a
Pittsburg Gazette-Times.
When a certain prominent Pittsburg-
er and his wife decided upon the adop
tion of a child, having none of their own,
it was arranged by the Children’s Aid
Society to have ready for their inspec
tion several homeless little boys from
which they might make a choice.
Among them was one aged 6, a wee bit
of a waif who had just come to the so
ciety. There had not been time to pro
vide suitable clothes for him, so that
with sleeves too long, trousers too short,
and his other scant raiment generally
ill-fitting, he was the least prepossess
ing one in the lot. When the Pitts-
burger looked about him, he whispered
to his wife: “We don’t want that one,”
and the couple sat down to consider the
other lads. As they talked with Miss
Chalfant, in charge of the society’s
work, the rejected one eyed the Pitts-
burger, who is a large fine-looking man,
and timidly edged alongside his chair.
The conversation had proceeded some
moments when the man glanced down
and beheld "a pudgy hand resting on his
knee and a pair of blue eyes gazing up
at him with frank admiration. Rather
reluctantly he picked up the ill-clothed
little figure and and sat him on his knee.
Miss Chalfant was called away at that
moment, but ns she passed out she saw
the big man’s head drawn down by a
chubby arm and heard a small voice
saying wistfully:
“I wish you was gonna be my papa.
I like you.”
When Miss Chalfant returned a little
later the man arose decisively.
“Well,” be said, “we have decided
to adopt this boy.”
“I am afraid,” replied Miss Chalfant,
“you are a little bit late ”
“What ” faltered the man.
“Because,” smiled the veteran in
child-lore, “I could see from the first
he had decided to adopt you.”
Capt.Bogardus Again Hits ths Bull’s
Eye.
This world famous rifle shot who
holds the championship record of 100
pigeons in 100 consecutive shots is living
in Lincoln, III/ Recently interviewed,
he sayB: “I have suffered a long time
with kidney and bladder trouble and
and have used several well known kid
ney medicines all of which gave me no
relief until I started taking Foley's
Kidney Pills. Before I used Foley’s
Kidney Pills I was subjected to severe
backache and pains in my kidneys with
suppression and oftentimes a cloudy
voiding. While upon arising m the
morning I would get dull headaches.
Now I have taken three bottleB of Fo
ley’s Kidney Pills and feel 100 per cent
better, I nm never bothered with my
Sidneys or bludd r and once more feel
like my own self. All this I owe aolely
to Foley*8 Kidney Pilhj ajrid always re
commend them to my fellow sufferers."
Sold by all druggists.
Marriage As a Livelihood.
Sarah Curtis Mott.
The statement has been made thou
sands of times, and never more fre
quently than in the last few years, that
woman’s proper sphere is the home, her
only business in life the making of it
comfortable and happy for her husband,
the bearing and rearing of his children.
To the woman who contemplates
matrimony from the standpoint of pro
vision for the future, we submit these
situations taken at random from caseB
we have known. They are the unvar
nished truth, and their pregnancy
should give her pause.
A girl married a young man of ex
cellent family and much personal charm,
but unsettled in business. Tho young
est of seven, he had been indulged to
the end that he did not take responsi
bility. After seven years, in which
they had moved nine times, each move
representing a change of position, the
woman awoke to the fact that her hus
band was an incompetent. Ordinary
comforts were lacking in the home.
Four children were growing up. The
day her husband resigned from his
tenth position she took account of his
stock. Never since she had been a
wife had she been properly supported,
never could she hope to be. There was
no alternative. Unaccustomed to pub
lic life, untrained for business, worn by
the burdens of poverty, yet brave and
determined, she went forth alone to
fight her battle.
In another family, two hours after
leaving home; a strong, healthy man
was brought back dead as a result of
an accident. There were ten little
ones. They had always been abun
dantly provided for, but the wife knew
nothing about her husband’s affairs,
and a rascally partner took all that he
possessed. Strenuously opposed to wo
men in business, she was yet compelled
to support her family.
One morning, after an affectionate
good-bye to his family, a man took
train for the West with a married wo
man. He left behind a wife and three
children, the youngest four months. It
required weeks of detective work to
convince her of his perfidy, but at last
she knew. Tho only work she could do
was kitchen work. Nobody wanted
woman with three babies. So the home
waB broken up, its inmates scattered.
The eldest hoy was sent to a relative in
one State, tho little girl to a friend in
another. The mother with the infant
went into a club house kitchen at $3
week.
A young couple started out in life
together under the brightest auspices,
Disaster overtook them, their entire
fortune was swept away in a day, and
they had to start over again. It was
an uphill struggle for the husband,
Two sons had to be educated. So the
wife, although untrained for business,
was forced to learn and take a hand in
the money-earning game.
Another woman was driven into the
business world to support a baby boy
and her husband, whom sickness had
rendered blind. Abuse made it neces
sary for still another wife to divorce
her husband and provide a home for
his mother as well as his five babies.
Another woman on whom necessity
laid a heavy hand struggled for years
against poverty and ill health, only in
the end to become a helpless invalid and
to see her children scattered, tho ob
jects of charity.
We need not add to this recital of un
fortunate cases. The daily press mul
tiplies them by the hundred. Your own
knowledge will suggest others in only
too large numbers. These are neither
unusual nor extreme.
Marriage is not a haven from the
storm. It is not a sanctuary for the
defenseless or the pursued. It is not
an insurance against misfortune. Strip
ped of its trappings and sentiment, and
tradition, It la at) investment. Like
any other investment, it fluctuates in
valuo according to various influences
within and without. We win or lose
according to tho insight or astuteness
shown in selection.
Being Sincere.
Tho assumed virtuo-of cheerfulness,
pleasant as it may be to encounter, nev
ertheless tends to a certain artificiality
of manner. The true-hearted girl, how
ever, Bees to it that thiB does not grow
to be a blight. She does not allow her
self to become mechanical, and without
being absolutely sincere, she is, never
theless, not insincere. She will not lie
to gain an advantage, nor does she find
it necessary to fawn upon people to win
their favor.
There is a decided line between a
harsh, awkward, and often cruel -sin
cerity of Bpeech and manner, and the
affected and insincere smiles and speech
which are far more disagreeable to en
counter than tho former brusque char
acteristics.
Ill-bred they are, but honest, and the
nauseously cloying flatteries and metal
lic ' smiles of the person who fancies
Buch tricks are believed in are bo decid
edly dishonest that they becortle warn
ings to all who obBorve them.
For this reason girls in the cultivq- .
tion of what we call sweetness must see
to it that their hearts are trained to
kindness, If they do not wish to grow
affected. Excusable in youth, this de
fect increases with years, and becomes
repellant in the maturer woman.
Pneumonia follows a cold but never
follows the use of Foley’s Honey and
Tar which stops the cough, heals the
lungs and expels the cold from the
system. Sold by all druggists.
She Made Rapid Progress.
Philadelphia Times.
The feminine will out, even in the
case of children. This was amusingly
shown not long ago, when little Caro
line, 7 yenrs old, and her brother, 6
years old, were sent to school on the
same day.
For a week they attended regularly,
and on Saturday night the proud father
called them to him. With one on each
knee he asked what they had learned
in school.
“Well,” said the boy, “I learned dat
de worl’ is round. I can count up to five
and say my alfabot.”
His father beamed, and by careful
questioning got quite a remarkable
amount of knowledge out of his small
n.
“I’m proud of you, Freddie,” he said,
smiling. “Now, Caroline, have you
learned lots, too?”
“Uh huh,” answered Caroline shyly,
“Well,” encouraged her father, “tell
us what you have learned.”
T learned the names of all the boys
in Freddie’B class,” she answered
proudly, and wept when her father
laughed.
NEEDFUL KNOWLEDGE.
Fully nine out of every ten cases of
rheumatism is simply rheumatism of
the muscles due to cold or damp or
chronic rheumatism, neither of which
requires any internal treatment. All
that is needed to afford relief is the free
application of Chamberlain's Liniment.
Give it a trial. You are Certain to be
pleased with the quick relief which it
affords. Sold by afl dealers.
“What are you Writing?” asked the
freshman.
“Just dropping a line to my gover
nor, wish ni nirrt many happy returns
of the day,” replied the sophomore.
“Why, is this his birthday?"
“No, payday. He sent me a check
this morning.”
11 ♦ ——
Every Woman Will Be Interested.
If you have pains in the back, urina
ry, bladder or kidney trouble, and want
a certain pleasant herb cure for wo
man’s ills, try Mother Gray’s Austra-
lian-Leaf. It is a safe and never-fuiling
regulator. At druggists or by m di 50
els’. Sample package free. Address,
The Mother Gray Co., Leroy, N. Y.
A man engaged several times should
bo an- expert on conflicting emotions.
Newnan People Should Learn to De
tect the Approaoh of Kid- 1
ney Disease.
The symptoms of kidney trouble are
so unmistakable that they leave no
ground for doubt. Sick kidneys ex-
crpte a thick, cloudy, offensive urine,
full of sediment, irregular of passage
or attended by a sensation of scalding.
The back aches constantly, headacheB
and dizzy spells may occur, and the vic
tim is often weighed down by a feeling
of languor and fatigue. Neglect these
warnings and there is danger of dropsy,
Bright's disease, or diabetes. Any one
of these symptoms is warning enough
to begin treating the kidneys at once.
Delay often proves fatal.
You can use no better remedy than
Doan’s Kidney Pills. Here’s Newnan
proof:
F. W. Brown, machinist, 18 Thomp
son street, v ewnan, Ga., says: “Some
months ago l was troubled a great deal
by pains in the small of my back. Pro
curing a box of Doan’s Kidney Pills at
Lee Bros, 1 drug store, I used them ac
cording to directions and was relieved
in a few days. I have been in good
health since.”
For sale by all dealers. Price 50
cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo,
New York, hole agents for the United
States.
Remember tho name—Doan’s—and
take no other.
SPALDING
BASE BALL
GOODS
NEW 1910 CROP
/HI the new books
the Circulating
Library
in
Murray’s Book Store.