Newspaper Page Text
' ’
NEWNAN HERALD & ADVERTISER
VOL. XLVIII.
NEWNAN, GA., FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1913.
NO. 51
VotesJor_Pony Contest at Banta’s | Votes for Pony Contest at Banta’s | Votes for Pony Contest at Banta’s | Votes for Pony Contest at Banta’s
Only Fourteen Weeks Till Xmas
I’ll bet you had not thought of it, but it’s a fact. Better buy a good watch for yourself before
your .wife, children or sweetheart call on you for that Christmas money, or present.
I SELL THE BEST MAK+ES OF WATCHES
Elgin Waltham Hamilton South Bend
s
d
PQ
CO
<y
•m
a
o
Q
>J
a;
o'
u
o
i i
Lifetime Watches
. The right sort of a watch will do you as long
as you need a watch.
—Here are the names of lifetime watches—
r
The Elgin.
The Waltham.
The Hamilton.
The South Bend.
The cost, starts at $12.50. You can get
■cheaper watches—lots of them.
We have them. But we are dealing with
“lifetime watches” in this ad.
Let us show you the height of watch per
fection at the lowest possible prices.
Let us show you to-day.
* I
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
iiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiM
The Master Time Piece
llllllll|lllllll||l||||||||||||ll|||||||||||||l|||||ll|||||l|l||||l|||lll|lll|lll!IIIIIIIIIIH
i i
HE modern
watch, the master
time piece, is the
South Bend.
Neat in aize, attractive in
appearance, unfailing in
its accuracy, the South
Bend is the watch for the modern
No watch we sell gives quite such
pleasing satisfaction as the South Bend.
*Tis a fact the South Bend makes us
more friends than does any other
watch. Drop in the store some day
and see the South Bend line.
When You Buy a Watch
From Us
There is one main advantage to you over get
ting it away from home.
This is it: If the watch doesn’t come up to
your expectations, why you always know
where to come to have the trouble adjusted or
the watch exchanged.
If we guarantee a watch, that guarantee is
BINDING.
It means what it says. If the watch goes
wrong, and it’s the watch’s fault, we are here
to make it right with you.
Buying away from home it’s different—very
different, you’lj find out if you have to have
the experience.
Watch prices as low here as anywhere in the
land—for equal values.
i i
I will, sell you a good watch for $5 50, and up to the FINEST MADE. If you believe I will give you a fair, square
deal, then every time you think of a watch I hope you will think of
II. S. BANTA, THE NEWNAN JEWELER
Votes for Pony Contest at Banta’s | Votes for Pony Contest at Banta’s | Votes for Pony Contest at Banta’s | Votes for"Pony Contest at Banta’s
H. C. ARNALL MERCHANDISE CO.
Grocery and Supply Department
We have from the beginning of the year 1913
tried to make it the best year’s business ever had by
our firm. Therefore, for the next three months we
are going to make a leader out of every "article we
handle in our large grocery room. We have a big
stock of everything that is handled in an up-to-date
place like ours.
Feeds of All Kinds
1
Shorts, Dalton bran, cotton seed meal, ground
feed, hen scratch feed, and little chick feed.
Flour
1
We know that we have the best flour accounts
on earth, and every barrel we sell you is guaranteed
to satisfy you. If you should happen to get flour
that is not what you want, we will pay you for your
trouble for returning same at ten cents per 100 lbs.,
both ways.
Plows
We are agents for the best plow made—the Chat
tanooga Steel-Beam. These people make any kind
of plow you want. Be sure and look at them before
you buy.
Georgia rye in stock, and ready for you.
In our store you will find anything you want. If
you don’t think this is true come and call for what
you need.
H. C. Arnall Mdse. Co.
THERE ARE LONELY HEARTS TO CHERISH
There ore lonely hearts to cherish,
I While the days are going by;
There are weary souls who perish,
Whilo the days are going by:
If a smile wo can ronew,
As our journey we persue.
Oh, the good we all may do,
While the days are going by.
There’s no time for idle scorning.
While the days are going by;
Let your face bo like the morning.
Whilo the days are going by:
Oh, the world Is full of sighs—
Full of nad and weeping eyes;
Help your fallen brother rise,
While the days are going by.
All the Joving links that bind us.
While the days are going by.
One by one we leave behind us.
While the days are going by;
But the seeds of good we sow,
Both in the shade and shine will grow.
And will keep your hearts aglow.
While the days are going by.
‘ —[George Cooper.
’Phone 342.
’Phone 58.
Man’s Chief Earthly Blessing.
Dorothy Dix.
A Western railroad has decided to
dispense with the services of all of its
employees who have not happy homes.
Thisis a drastic exemplification of
the truth of the bible axiom that to
him who hath shall be given, and from
him who hath not shall be taken away,
even that which he hath.
Certainly it is tough luck on the man
who has a shrewish and nagging wife
and a slovenly home to have his job
taken away from him on account of his
misfortunes, and to be deprived of
whatever peace and comfort he can get
out of a long run that takeB him away
from the scene of his misery. Perhaps
the reason that trains are so often late
is because so many concjpctore and en
gineers ure not in any hurry to get
back home.
Aside, however, from the surface
cruelty of such an order, there can be
no question of the wisdom of the rail
road in making it, for happiness in his
home life is an actual, tangible asset
that adds appreciably to a man’s effi
ciency.
And this applies not only to railroad
men, but to men in every walk and
calling of life, between the man who
goes forth to his labor from a peaceful,
cheerful, well-ordered horpe, and the
one who goes forth from a home that
is a well of bitterness, and unrest, and
strife, there is not only the difference
b< twe^n happiness and misery, but be
tween success and failure.
Nor is the reason for this hard to
find. We all have just a certain amount
of strength and vitality and nervous
force, and if we consume this in fight
ing home conditions we have not got it
to give to our work, and the work suf
fers in consequence.
At the best, modern life is heart-
breakingly strenuous. Competition in
every line is as fierce as a fight among
ravening wolves. Every man is forced
to work at high pressure, with every
nerve and sinew and brain cell speeded
up to the limit. The inevitable result
is that the end of the day finds him ex
hausted in mind and body, and whether
he goes back to his labor the next day
with fresh energy and hope and courr
age, or exhausted and discouraged and-
despairing, depends upon the kUrfd of ; a
home that he Hob.
If he goes at night to a home that is
literally a haven of rest; if he is set
down to a good dinner of wholesome
and well-prepared food; if he is petted
and coddled, and made much of until
the very memory of the rebufFs he has
received during the day are wiped out
of his memory; if he can spend a quiet,
restful evening over book and pipe, or
with the friends he enjoys; if the face
of his wife across the hearthstone from
him is turned always to him with a
look of love, and of understanding and
appreciation; if there are little children
who clamber on his knee and whose
arms are about his neck; if, in a word,
the whole atmosphere of his home is
one of sunshine, and tenderness, and
sweetness, it works a daily miracle for
him and renews his strength and ability
every time he touches it.
Such a man goes back to his work
with a rested botjy and a clear head.
His mind is not distracted from his bus
iness by domestic worries and anxie
ties. He can give the best that’s in
him to his labor without having*to force
back into a corner of his mind the rec
ollection of the last scene at home.
More than that, in his love for his wife
and children and his desire to make his
home even more beautiful, he has the
strongest possible incentive to work
harder, and do better work all the
time.
Far n’hpr* h*» i« it with the man who,
after his hard day’s labor, returns re
luctantly home to a place that is a per
petual battle-ground. He has to sum
mon up his courage to put his key in
the lock, for well he knows the com
plaints, the quarreling, the hysteria
that he must face, or the untidy room
in which he must sit and the miserable
food on which he roust poison himself.
His home life exhausts him more than
the most fatiguing labor, and he goes
back to his work with stomach upset,
nerves on edge, and a soul surcharged
with bitterness. He is literally unfitted
in mind and in body to do good work,
or exercise clear judgment.
If you will notice among your ac
quaintances you will observe that when
a man breaks down with what we call
nervouq prostration there is nearly al
ways so’fhe domestic tragedy at the
back of it. For one cause or another,
his home life is miserable. It isn’t
work that shatters health; it’s worry.
And as long as a man has a happy home
he can do almost any amount of labor
without collapsing under the strain.
Happiness itself is a tonic that is worth
all of the drugs in the pharmacopia.
Don't Worry.
Kanaoa City Star.
Don’t worry,” was the recipe for
long life recently given by an agfgl phy
sician who had preserved his youth.
‘Good advice, but impractical,” you
Bay. But did you ever give it a real
trial? A person can’t stop 4 worrying
merely by saying, “Go to, now; I am
not going to worry any more.” The
more he thinks about stopping the more
impossible it is to stop.
There is a way, though. Don’t con
sciously try to 8top worrying, but get
interested in something else.
If you have something to worry
about and give yourself the opportuni
ty, you will do a lot of worry. But if
you keep busy you will not give worr'
a chance. When a great sorrow com&s
a person may simply abandon himself
to lip. by letting his other interests lag.
But by looking about for something to
absorb his attention he can put himself
in a wholesome frame of mind.
Worry oan be fought the same way.
To Prevent Blood Poisoning
apply at once the wonderful old reliable DR.
PORTSR’B ANTI8BPTJC HHALING OIL.* tur
cica! dreaainr that relieves pain and beala at
the same time. Not a liniment. iSc. 50c. fl.OQ.
Could He Talk?
Southom Merchant
A countryman from a noar-by Ala
bama town was In Atlanta not long
ago. Ho saw many things that excited
his interest, but the thing with which
ho wss more particularly impressed
was a largo and gaudy parrot in a
cago hung out in front of a near-beer
saloon. He had hoard that parrots
could talk, but had always been skep
tical on that point. He Btopped to
look at the bird and was anxioua to
hear it say something, but the creature
Becmed not to be in a talking mood.
By and by the owner of the saloon,
a German, stepped out on the pave
ment. To him the wayfarer addressed
himself as followh;
"I say, mum-mum-mum-mister, can
that pup-pup-pup-parrut tut-tut-tut-
talk?”
Looking down upon him with much
dlBguBt, the owner roplled: "Can he
talk? Well, if he ain’t talk so better
as you, I chop his tarn head off.”
PERFECT CONFIDENCE.
Newnan People Have Good Besson
for Complete Beliance.
Do you know how—
To And relief from backache;
To correct distressing urinary ills;
To assist weak kidneys?
Your neighbors know the way—
Have used Doon’a Kidney PIIIb;
Have proved their worth in many
tests.
Here’s Newnan testimony.
Mrs. H. W. Jennings, 78 Murray
St., Newnan, Ga„ says: "1 tcstiAcd as
to the merit of Doan’s Kidney Pills
some yearB ago In a public statement
and to-day I am pleased to say that my
faith in thiB remedy is stronger than
ever, I did not have a personal ex
perience with this remedy when I gave
myI former testimonial, but others of
my family had been helped by them,
■"o-day, however, I can praise Doan’s
Lidney Pills from personal UBe. They
eve been very, effective in curing me
of painB across my back and weakness
through my hips and loins, together
with other annoying symptoms of kid
ney complaint."
For Bale by all dealers. Price BO
cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo,
New York, sole agents for the United
States.
Remember the name—Doan’s—and
take no other.