Newspaper Page Text
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NEWNAN HERALD & ADVERTISER
VOL. XLVIII.
NEWNAN, GA., FRIDAY, APRIL 25, 1913.
NO. 30
TOP
RESSERS DO PAY!
A/V0 FA V WELLl
Jheiv Use Has Become a Necessity— Their Value Indispensable
When you put fertilizer in the ground, you want it to come out in gold dollars. Experiments
are expensive—being sure of results is most important.
The value of top dressers depends on their contents. The use of too much nitrogen is unwise,
as the plant cannot appropriate a large quantity in the limited time before maturity. Every unit losft
by evaporation represents gold dollars lost.
Nitrogen being the controlling element of plant food, must be
quickly soluble, in order to feed the plant roots and make weed.
Without a full grown stalk you cannot reasonably expect a large
yield. We use only high-grade, concentrated nitrates, and in exact
ly the right proportion.
Phosphoric acid should be used, but its too free use is unwise.
Just enough should be added to the ipixture to impart health and
vitality to the fruit. We use enough and no more than is necessary
for this purpose.
Potash gives body, tone and strength to both weed and fruit,
and too much care cannot be exercised in the selection of this ma
terial. We use only high-strength muriates, and are thus always
assured of results.
If you want foliage alone, then use nitrate of soda; but if you
want fruit and foliage, use top dressers such as we make, containing
all essential elements for the production of both. Part pay is all
you get from your plant when you feed only a part of its roots. Feed
them all and get in return full pay in fruit.
WE MAKE THREE BRANDS
Coweta Royal Top Dresser
Coweta Success Top Dresser -
Coweta Perfection Top Dresser
4-10-4
4- 10-2
5- 8-3
Company
AGENTS: Anderson & Bowers, Newnan; H. C. Arnall Mdse. Co., Newnan; C. T. Sewell, Roscoe.
DRIVE YOUR WAGONS TO MURRAY’S WAREHOUSE TO BE LOADED
ASK THE PURE FOOD INSPCETOR
You would not ask Hal Fisher or Dan Manget
to sell you 19-4-4 fertilizer at a price they
would ask for an 8-2-2. When you buy mixed
feed be sure and see what is on the tag—not
jlonly the analysis, but the ingredients. On
some you will find “oat feed,” which is only
a fancy name for oat hull. Oat hull has no
feeding value whatsoever. You insist on a
feed high in protein and fat, and low in fiber.
If you do this, you will get a pure feed. Note
the analysis of our PRIMO FEED—protein
11.5, fat 3.5, fiber 9.5.
IcBride Grain & Feed Co.
For Sale in Newnan by H. C. Glover Co., H. C. Arnall
Mdse. Co., T. G. Farmer & Sons Co. and I: N. Orr Co.
On sale also at Grantville, Moreland, Sharpsburg, Turin
and Palmetto. Ask your dealer for “Primo Feed."
160-Page
Poultry
Book Free
Lousy Hens
are never profitable. They cannot lay
when tortured night and day by lice
and mites. Dust the hens with
Pretty Powdered Lice Killer
* 25c and 50c
to exterminate the body lice, and paint
or spray the roosts and nests with
Liquid Lice Killer
35e, 00c and 51
sweeten them up and destroy mites.
Thai meui)8 bigger profits.
“Your money baclt If It falls.”
<3et Pratts Profit-sharing Booklet.
JOHN R. OATES DRUG 00., Fewnan, Ga.; OUR
ETON-COLE CO., Moreland, Ga.
Prep*
Bfi.KiiVS'S Kifc.'tFtiASSC'e'VCHN
Kill Euruly Stoo Vital Couati.
E?r. Slang’s New LiSe Fills
The bost in the world.
FOR OUR DEAD.
I.
Flowers for our dead I
The delicate wild roses faintly red.
The valley lily bells os purely white
As shineB their honor in the vernal light,
All blooms that be
As fragrant as their fadeless memory,
By tender hands entwined and garlanded—
Flowers fhr our dead 1
II.
Praise for our dead!
For those who followed and for those who led.
Whether they felt death’s burning accolade
When brothers drew the fratricidal-blade
Or cloBfd undaunted eyes
Beneath the Cuban or Philippine skies.
While waves our brave bright banner overhead)
Praise for our dead I
III.
Love for our dead!
O, hearts, that droop and mourn, be comforted 1
The darksome path through the abyBS of pain.
The final hour of travail not in vain.
For Freedom's morning smilo
Broadens across the Beas from isle to isle.
By reverent lips let this fond word be said—
Love for our dead 1
BATTLE ABBEY OF THE SOUTH
When the Confederate Memorial In
stitute, now nearing completion in
Richmond, the former capital of the
Confederacy, is dedicated it will be the
handsomest building of the kind in the
world and will be a fitting memorial to
the men who fought and died for the
Lost Cause. It will be the Battle Ab
bey of the South and will stand as a
lasting record of the* chivalrous South
ern civilization characteristic of Dixie
Land.
The institute represents years Q* ef
fort on the part of the Confederate Me
morial Association and the United
Daughters of the Confederacy. It is
erected by the people of the whole
South as their storehouse for the his
torical records of the war period. In
it will be preserved for all time the
documents pertaining to that titanic
struggle.
No expense has been spared to beau
tify the grounds and building. Large
private subscriptions have helped to
swell Jhe gigantic fund necessary to the
undertaking. The mural paintings
alone in one room will cost $30,000, and
it will take the artist two years to com
plete the work. It wilt occupy a com
manding site in the residential section
of new Richmond and will be main
tained by the association under whose
auspices it will be constructed, acting in
its capacity as trustee for the people of
all the Southern States.
The site is located on the left side of
the Boulevard between Stuart avenue
and Kensington street. The association
owns the lot between these two streets,
which extends westward' as far as
Sheppard street. The dimensions of
the property measure 379 feet on the
Boulevard and Sheppard street and 730
feet on Stuart avenue and Kensington
street. The site is on an eminence,
and the grounds are so laid out as to
display to the beat advantage the dig
nified and imposing structure.
The structure stands 160 feet' back
from the Boulevard upon a terrace de
signed to give at once a dignified set
ting and suitable approach to the build
ing. A broad flight of stone steps leads
from the lower level to the terrace,
flanked on either side by a stone balus
trade. The terrace, itself extending
some thirty-five feet from the building
and eight feet above the lower level, is
continued around the ends of the build
ing, giving access to the grounds in the
rear. These will be commodious and
beautiful. The building itself is not
large, .although it is imposing.
The building, which is faced through
out with Indiana limestone, consists of
a central pavilion with a wing on either
side, having a total length of 160- feet
and a height from the terrace to the
top of the parapet of forty-four feet.
The main entrance Is behind a portico
of four columns of limestone of the Ro
man Ionic order twenty-five feet in
height.
The two wings on the outside are di
vided into panels by means of pilasters
•f slight projection, and below the cor
nice which crowns the whole large
stones are provided which it is hoped at
no distant day will be transformed by
the art of the sculptor into carved pan
els to serve as suitable memorials of
some of the great events of that time
which the whole building is designed to
commemorate.
Passing through the main entrance,
which is guarded by bronze doors six
feet wide and seventeen feet high, the
visitor enters a hall thirty feet long
and twenty feet wide. The floor of the
hall is of Georgia marble. The walls
are divided into panels by pilasters of a
warm cream colored marble supporting
a cornice of the Roman Doric order
The ceiling of the hall is in the form of
a .curved vault, with an ornamental
skylight of leaded glass.
In the spaces above the cornice at
either end of the hall will be placed a
reproduction of the battleflag of the
Confederacy, done in colors, and in the
upper portion of the spaces below the
cornice and between the pilasters will
be panels of ornamental design, each
containing a reproduction of a seal of
one of the eleven original Confederate
StateB. Opposite the main entrance
and opening on the main entrance hall
are situated the office of the secretary
and the coat room.
Turning to the left from the entrance
hall, one enters the Memorial Hall, the
most interesting and important room in
the building. Its dimensions are:
Length 46 feet, width 34 feet, and height
from floor to ceiling 29 feeti The arch
itectural features of this room are de
signed to act as a frame for the paint
ings, which are to occupy all the wall
spaces. The finish, which will be of
quartered white oak, consists of fluted
pilasters, with carved Corinthian capi
tals supporting a richly ornamented
cornice. A wainscot three feet high is
carried round the room and forms a
base for the pilasters. But the impor
tant feature of this room will be the
paintings. These will be devoted to
the military history of the Confederacy
and will be done by the eminent artist,
Charles Hoffbauer.
The grounds behind the building are
to be laid out so as to form a lawn of
greensward stretching almost to Shep
pard street, flanked on three sides with
magnolia trees and flowering shrubs,
with English ivy and periwinkle form
ing a carpet. The lawn (aptly called
" ~ * “‘beborde
Europe a Big Fake.
New York, April 16.—Here, in a nut
shell, is the condensation of the views
on Europe held by Frederick H. Miller,
a wealthy manufacturer of Evanston,
111., who arrived in port to-day on the
liner “Kaiser Wilhelm Der Grosse:”
“Europe in general is a grand bunk.
Paris is nothing more than a sideshow;
Venice is a place where the sanitary
board should get to work at once; Lon
don is the most dismal place in the
world, and Monte Carlo is a gambling
den that ought to be raided. I wouldn't
go back to Europe if they gave me a
free ticket. Why, I saw women wear
ing clothes in Paris that were certainly
the freakish products of unsettled
minds. If a woman in Evanston wore
Buch things she would be ridden on a
rail.”
the Court of Honor) will be bordered at
intervals with statues of eminent
statesmen and warriors.
Coughs, Colds, Watery Byes Cured
in a Day
by taking Cheney's Expectorant—also
cures consumption, whooping cough,
droppings from the nose and throat,
Bronchitis, and all throat and lung
troubles. Cheney’s Expectorant, a
liquid preparation, tested for 60 years.
Thousand cures made where all else
failed. Try it. Safe, sure and satis
factory. Druggists, 26c and 60c.
The greatest Joss to any man is his
self-respect.
Cures Old Sores., Other Remedies Won't Curl
The worst cases, no matter of how long standing,
ore cured by the wonderful, old reliable Dr.
Porter's Antiseptic Healing OU. It relieves
Pain and Heals at the same time. 2Sc, 60c, $LOO.
T HE most sensible sanitary and eco
nomical method of using water
from well, lake, stream or spring.
No storage tank to collect slime, mud or
rust. No tepid water In summer or frozen
tanks in winter. Compressed air delivers
water fresh from the well or other source
of supply under the pressure and in
quantities you need. Constant supply
always ready for drinking, kitchen, laun
dry, bath, barn, sprinkling and fire pro*
tection. Turn thefaucetandyougetpure.
fresh water. Easily and cheaply installed
in any old or new houses. Uses any kind
of power—located anywhere. Can pipe
for hard and soft water If desired. Call and
f ret free copy of the Perry Book or let us send
t to you. Let us explain- the merits of the
Perry System. You cannot afford to instnll
any system of water supply until you Investi
gate the Perry. It has more advantages than
any other. ^ by _
Gooddy & McElroy
10 W. Washington St.
FRESH FROM THE WELL
^ee the miuhine I'• operation ut Goonuy's
| shop, 19 VV. Wushinuton Sr., Nt.Wi.uu, Ga.