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■Weak Heart
Many people suffer from weak hearts. They
may experience shortness of breath on exertion,
jiuin over tlie heart, or ilizzy fooliriR’s, oppressed breathing
nfter meals or their eyes become blurred, the heart is not
sufficiently strong to pump blood to the extremities, anti
they have cold hands and feet, or poor appetite because of weakened
blow) supply In tho stomach, A heart tunic ami alterative should bu taken which lias
no bad aftor-effect. Such is
Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery
which onntnlnn no dungorous narcotics or alcohol.
It help* tho human system in the constant manufacture nf rich, ml Mood. It
helps tho stomach to nnslmilato nr take up thoproper elements fromth' 1 food, thereby
helping digestion nntl curing dyspepsia, heart-burn and many uncomfortable nymp-
tomn, stops exceasivo tissuo waste in convalescence from fevers; for tho run
down, aiiicinic, thin-blooded people, tho "Discovery" is refreshing and vitalizing.
in liquid or tablet form at moif drug atom* or Bend SO one-cent
etampa for trial box to Dr.Pieree'a Invalid*' Hotel, Buffalo, TV. Y,
Read Chapter VII on Circulatory Organa in the ‘'Medical Advianr" — A French doth*
bound book of 1008 pages sent on receipt of 31 one-cant atampa, addreaa aa above.
The Herald and Advertiser
NEWNAN, FRIDAY, MAY 8'.
MAVIS HU I LI) I NO II RR HOUSE.
May In building her house. With apple blnomH
She ii« roofing over tho glimmering rooms;
Of the oak nnd the beech hath she budded it h
Iwnitia,
Ami. spinning (ill dny at her aecret looms.
With arras nf leaven enah wind-Htnynd wall
She picture! h over and peoploth It all
With erhoen and dream*
And winging of stream*.
May in building Imt house. Of petal and blade.
Of thr* ronl* of the oak in the flooring made.
With a carpet nf mouse* and lichen and clover,
F.nch email mlrnrle over and over,
And tender, traveling green thinga strayed,
Her windows, the morning and evening alar,
And her milling doorways, ever ajar
With the coming and going
Of fair thlnga blowing,
The threshold* of the four wlnda are.
May is building her houae. From the duat of
thingH
She in making I lie aonga and the flowera and
winga;
Frnm October'a foH*i*d und trodden gold
She la making Hie voting year out of the old;
Yen, out of winter's flying Hleet
Sho in making all the aurnmer sweet.
And brown leaven Hpurned nf November’a feet
She fa changing back again to Spring’a.
—IKIchanl LoOnllienne.
Angry Crowd Drives Burns from
Marietta.
Atlanta Journal, ‘2d Inst.
Detective William J. Burns was
driven out of Marietta Friday evening,
after a demonstration against him in
which several hundred men took pBrt.
The detective, who was accompanied
by Dan S. I.ehon, one of his lieutenants,
was not seriously injured, although he
wbb struck in the face by one man,
threatened with a knife by another, and
vcrhully insulted and nbused by the
crowd.
Burns nnd I.ehon were passing
through Marietta, on route to Cedar-
town, in a big limousine, when a tire
(dew out. The two men left the car
nnd walked to the Brumby garage on
Church st reet. Borns was recognized
t'v a crowd of people standing about.
Suno nf them yelled: “Thorb goes
William Jackass Burns!"
Burns and I.ehon kept on to the gar
age and the crowd followed, being
rapidly augmented.
When they reached the garage, Rob
ert Howell stepped up to tho detec
tive nnd said: "This is Burns, isn’t it?"
The detective is said to have denied
his identity, when Howell cnlled him a
“d—d liar."
“I hnvo promised to beat you if you
ever ciitne to Marietta, und here goes, ”
Howell is said to have added, striking
the detective lirst on one cheek and
then on the other.
Mr. BurnH in his version of the affair
says that at this point another man
tried to reach him with a knife, but
was held by I.ehon,
Howell kicked at the detective
several times nnd Burns made a brenk
past the crowd to the trolley line de
pot. He was headed off by a big
crowd, and dodged into tho Whitlock
hotel.
The crowd increased every second in
size, as Friday was election day for
Cobb county and the streets of Mari
etta wore thronged with people at the
time.
Burns once tried to escape from the
hotel by the back way, but the place
the hotel shouted angrily at Burns, and
finally Mayor J. E. Dobbs, Judge Newt
Morris, former Judge of the Superior
Court of the Cherokee Circuit, and Dr.
J. H. Patton, a well-known minister,
made short talks to the crowd, urging
no violence and begging them to dis
perse.
The rumor had gone the rounds in
Marietta that the dectective had been
driven from Atlanta, and the shout of
the crowd was “Burns can’t stay in
Cobb county."
Finally Judge Morris asked the crowd
if it would be satisfied should Burns
leave immediately, not to return. The
crowd agreed not to harm him, on
thin condition.
T. M. Brumby, a well-known citizen,
brought his car around, and Burns
stepped from the hotel. He got into
the car and it dashed away.
Besides Mr. Brumhy, Judge Morris
accompanied the detective to the city.
I.ehon, after remaining for another
half hour under the protection of the
deputy sheriff, was furnished with an
automobile and he joined his chief in
Atlanta.
No members of the crowd have been
arrested.
Marietta is the birth-place of little
Mary Phagan, and the feeling there
about her murder is intense.
ANOTHER ACCOUNT.
Atlanta Cor. Macon Telegraph.
Atlanta, May 2.-Mexico, the Frank
case and grand opera have tended to
put a quietus to political gOBsip of al
most any sort hereabouts, at least, for
the past week or so.
The swift and entangling events con
nected with the Frank case—reaching
a climax Inst night when Detective
William J. Burns was chased from Ma
rietta by an angry crowd—have ab
sorbed local attention, and, from re
ports, is having largely the same effect
all over the State.
Recent developments here have
served to whip public interest and feel
ing to almost a white-hot intensity.
Not even in the days immediately fol
lowing tho murder of Mary Phagan and
the trial, has feeling run so high, and
cool-headed people see grave danger if
many more sensational events occur
within the next few days.
A prominent Marietta man gave an
illuminating und humorous account of
the little affair up there last night.
The account did not add anything to
the luster of the Burns name, to say
the least of it.
"We are not a bloodthirsty people,”
said the gentleman. "And, as a mat
ter of sheer fact, I do not think, nor
does anyone else, that any real inten
tion existed of doing Burns seri
ous physical harm. But Marietta is
the former home of the dead girl, Mary
Phagan; her body sleeps beneath the
sod of Cobb, and the people there have
intense feeling on the subject.
"They resent the intrusion of
Detective Burns and his assistant,
1,elxm, into file case. At first, 1 think
Burns' appearance excited curiosity,
ami a crowd gathered about the gar
age to see tlie great detective. Mr.
was well surroundei, und ha had to I Howell became angered by some re
hasten hack. J ply Burns made to a question, and he
While Burns was hemmed in the ho- slapped the detective's face and dared
tel, Robert Howell spied the chauffeur j him to strike hack,
who carried the two detectives to Mu j "That created a tense moment, for
rietta in the car. He is said to have 1 you know how easily passion can he
walked up the chauffeur and after! fanned to flame. If Burns had shown
cursing him ordered him out of the resentment he might have fared badly,
car. I he ehaulieur jumped to the - But he did not, and he got away from
ground, trembling, but was not fur-| there nnd to the Whitlock house as
ther molested, and after Howell left the quick as a man of his physique could
vicinity citizens told him to get in the make it. When ho finally came out of
car und light out for Atlanta. | the hotel, an agreement having been
In the meantime I.ehon, separated reached to let him go in peace, he
from his chief, found shelter and pro- was undoubtedly a badly scared man.
tection in the office of Deputy Sneritf He showed it in tiis face, walk ar.d
J. M. Hicks. I he crowd in front of I general demeanor. Perhaps he thought
- ! he was up against trouble for fair.
"I am honest in saying that no in
tention was manifested to more than
muss Burns up, perhaps. However,
the Situation could easily have been
turned into aserious affair. Odds oflOO
to 1 are offered up that way that Mr.
Burns and Mr. Lehon do not come back
to Marietta for affidavits, or in fact,
for anything else very soon.”
That Burns was a panic-stricken man
untii he wbb safe back in Atlanta is
amply testified to by several.
And to-day he came back to as se
vere a grilling at the hands of Solicitor-
General Hugh Dorsey as man ever
underwent.
If Burns has helped the Frank case
in any particular no one here is able to
see it. On the contrary, most people
think he has done it harm, and, inciden
tally, has not helped his own reputation.
Spring Fragrance.
Youth’s Companion.
The sense of smell has its own great
pleasures. For many people odors,
many more vividly than anything else,
evoke old scenes and cherished asso
ciations. Instances are innumerable;
sometimes the smell of frying dough
nuts will bring back to a man his whole
childhood.
Even more delicate and potent than
such odors of the workaday world lis
the fragrance of nature. It varies
with the seasons, Jor each part of the
year has a peculiar fragrance of its
own. By fragrance is meant, not so
much definite odor, as the whole charac
teristic quality of the atmosphere that
at the time pervades the earth and the
sky. The period of harvest has it, the
drowsy mid-summer is full of it, poets
love to hymn the air of June. But you
hear less often of the aroma of April, for
it takes the keenest sense to catch it.
But John Burroughs has done so:
“Its odors! I am thrilled by its fresh
and undescribable odors —the perfume
of the bursting sod, of the ‘fresh fur-
rowB. No other month has odors like
it. The west wind the other day came
fraught with a perfume that was to
the sense of smell what a wild and deli
cate strain of music is to the ear. It
was almost transcendental. I walked
across the hill with my nose in the air,
taking it in. It lasted two days. I
imagined it came from the willows of
a distant swamp, whose catkins were
affording the breeze their first pollen,
or did it come from much farther—
from beyond the horizon, the accumu
lated breath of many farms and bud
ding forests? The main characteris
tic of these April odors is their un
cloying freshness. They are not sweet;
they are often bitter; they are pene
trating and lyrical. I know well the
odors of May and June, of the world of
meadows and orchards bursting into
bloom, but they are immaterial and not
so stimulating to the sense as the in
cense of April.”
This passage is in pleasing contrast
to tho hackneyed phrases about the
“smiles and tears” of April. Mr. Bur
roughs' vivid picture well catches the
special quality of new life, the glow of
regeneration peculiar to the month. In
April as it merges into May the very
air, like everything else, seems ani
mated and pulsing. Even the throb of
the October breeze is no more potent
to fill mankind with the joy of living.
RUN-DOWN WOMEN
Find Health in a Simple Tonic.
Hew many women do you know
who are perfectly well, strong and
healthy as a woman should be? They
may not be sick enough to lie In bed
—but they are run-down, thin, nerv
ous, tired and devitalized.
Women are so active nowadays,
and so much Is expected of them,
that they constantly overdo and suf
fer from headache, backache, nervous
ness and kindred ills.
Such women need VInol, our deli
cious cod liver and Iron tonic with
out oil which will create an appetite,
tone up the digestive organs, make
pure blood and create strength.
Mrs. Walter Price, Biloxi, Miss.,
says: "I was In a run-down condition
for months, I had taken several medi
cines but they seemed to do me no
good. Finally VInol was recommend
ed, and from the first bottle I began
to Improve until I am strong and well
as ever.”
Try a bottle of VInol with the un
derstanding that your money will be
returned if It does not help you.
r. S.—For pimples and bloteheB try
our Saxo Salve. We guarantee It
JOHN R. CATES DRUG C0„ Newnan
The story i3 told of a Confederate
major who was in command of troops
who were in pursuit of some outlaws.
In the chase he arrived at a village to
discover that he was too late to inter
cept them and finally ordered the
horses unsaddled and fed.
Now, the major’s hostler was a son
of Ireland, ignorant of everything per
taining to the equestrian art, and com
ing in from the village in a state bor
dering on intoxication, he put the ma
jor’s saddle on the horse facing to the
rear. When the horses were brought
up for a fresh start the major, instant
ly discovering the mistake, demanded
the reason for it.
"An’ shure,” said Pat, a little terri
fied—“an’ shure, major, an’ I didn’t
know which way you was goin’l”
An explosion followed. The major
was satisfied, and Pat escaped punish
ment.
Helps Kidney and Bladder Trouble—
Everybody Satisfied.
Everywhere people are taking Foley’s
Kidney Pills, and are so well satisfied
thev urge others to take them also. A.
T. Kelly, McIntosh, Ala., Bays: "I rec
ommend them to all who suffer from
kidney troubles and backache—for they
are fine.” Best thing you can take for
backache, weak back and rheumatism.
For sale by all dealers.
Tommy had just completed his first
term at a boarding school. On the even
ing of his return home, wishing to im
press his little sister with the vastness
of his knowledge, he led her to a nurse
ry window, pointed to a star and said:
"You see that light up there? Well,
it’s bigger than all this world.”
"No, ’tain’t,” replied his sister.
"But I tell you it is," returned the
youthful scholar.
“Then why is it that it can’t keep off
the rain?” was the baffling retort.
NO DISCOMFORT FROM
DODSON’S LIVER TONE.
Cure For Stomach Disorders.
Disorders of the stomach may be
avoided by the use of Chamberlain’s
Tablets. Many very remarkable cures
have been effected by these tablets.
Sold by all dealers.
Two men were talking of hard times.
> "Does your wife ever grieve because
she t(jr,ew over a wealthy man in order
to marrV you?” queried Hall.
“Well, she started to once,” was the
reply, "but I cured her of it without
delay.”
"I wish you would tell me how,"
said Hall.
“I started right in grieving with
her,” replied the other, "and I grieved
harder and longer than she did!”
Violent Purgatives Need No Longer
Be Used for Constipation, so Why
Run Risks of Their Disagree
able After-Effects.
To overcome constipation and slug
gish liver pleasantly, easily and safely,
Dodson’s Liver Tone is guaranteed by
John R. Cates Drug Co., who will
cheerfully refund purchase price (50c.)
at once if you are not entirely satisfied
with it.
Dodson’s Liver Tone is made to take
the place of calomel and other strong
purgatives. It has none of the disa
greeable and often dangerous after-ef
fects of calomel, which is in fact a
poison, a mineral, a form of deadly
mercury.
Dodson’s Liver Tone is a strictly veg
etable liquid, containing nothing harm
ful. It not only leaves no bad effects
but works easily and naturally, without
pain or gripe and without interfering
at all with your regular habits, diet or
occupation. A trial may benefit you
greatly. Why not see about it to-day?
YOU HAVE TRIED THE REST.
NOW USE THE BEST.
F ir rale by W. S. ASKEW CO
nan, Ga.
New
"As the car rolled out at high speed
some unsalable bananas, tomatoes and
I eggs were hurled at the car. Some
| hit the mark. Judge Newt Morris was
j the receiving end of a decayedjlegg.
} tin the way to Atlanta, Burns urged
; speed, speed, speed. HeJ feared) what
lay behind, and which might be coming.
The trip from Marietta to the Pied
mont hotel was made in ;?2 minutes.
"But the really laughable: part was
played by Lehon. He went to the jail,
it is said, to get warrants for persons
engaged in the so-called assault. He
remained, and gladly, too, behind the
protecting walls of the jail until atfairs
had quieted down and he could, or felt
he could, leave safelv.
mum^
You Need a Tonic
There arc times in every woman’s life when she
needs a tonic to help her over the hard places.
When that time comes to you, you know what tonic
to take—Cardui, the woman’s tonic. Cardui is com
posed of purely vegetable ingredients, which act
gently, yet surely, on the weakened womanly organs^
and helps build them back to strength and health.
It has benefited thousands and thousands of weak,
ailing women in its past half century of wonderful
success, and it will do the same for you.
You can’t make a mistake in taking
CARDUI
The Woman’s Tonic
Miss Amelia Wilson, R. F. D. No. 4, Alma, Ark.,
says: “I think Cardui is the greatest medicine on earth,
for women. Before I began to take Cardui, I was
so weak and nervous, and had such awful dizzy
spells and a poor appetite. Now I teei as well and
as strong as I ever did, and can eat most anything.”
Begin taking Cardui today. Sold by all dealers.
Has Helped Thousands. ,
mini
pAINT yOUR J-JOME
With Lead, Zinc and Asbestos Paint
It stands the test. The Government uses Lead,
Zinc and Asbestos Paint.
Will not peel or crack. Is perfectly white.
We are doing the business. It seems to be just
what the people want. High quality goods, and com
petition not in the way. Let us have a little talk
with you about paint.
Johnson Hardware Co.
’Phone 81
Newnan. Ga.
SLEEP DISTURBING BLADDER WEAKNESS
BACKACHE-RHEUMATISM, QUICKLY VANISH
Even Most Chronic Sufferers
Find Relief After A Few
Doses Are Taken
Backache, urinary disorders, and
rheumatism, are caused from weak,
inactive kidneys, which fail to filter
out the impurities and keep the blood
pure, and the only way on earth to
premanently and positively cure such
troubles, is to remove the cause.
The new discovery, Croxone, cures
such conditions because it reaches
the very roots of the disease. It
soaks right into the stopped up, in
active kidneys, through the walls and
linings; cleans out the little filtering
cells and glands; neutralizes and dis
solves the poisonous uric acid sub
stances that lodge in the joints and
muscles to scratch and irritate and
cause rheumatism; it neutralizes the
urine so it no longer irritates the
tender membranes of the bladder,
and cleans out and strengthens the
stopped up, lifeless kidneys so they
filter and sift all the poisons from
the blood, and drive it out of the
system.
So sure, so positive, so quick and
lasting, are the results obtained from
the use of Croxone, that three doses
a day for a few days are often all
that is required to cure the worst
case of backache, regulate the most
annoying bladder disorders, and over
come the numerous other similar
conditions.
It is the most wonderful prepara
tion ever made for the purpose. It
is entirely different from all other
remedies. There is nothing else on
earth to compare with it. It is so
prepared that it is practically impos
sible to take it into the human sys
tem without results.
You can obtain an original package
of Croxone at trifling cost from any
first-class drug store. All druggists
are authorized to personally return
the purchase price if Croxone fails to
give desired results, regardless of
how old you are, how long you have
suffered, or what else has failed to
cure you,
Our Southern Friends are Proud of Mexican Mustang Liniment
because it has saved them from so much suffering. It soothes
and relieves pain soon as applied. Is made of oils, without
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of people write us that Mustang
Liniment cured them when all
other remedies failed.
MEXICAN
Mustang
Liniment
The Great Family Remedy for
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Mumps,
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- Rheumatism,
Sprains,
Colds,
Lameness,
Backache,
Scalds,
Bruises
and the ailments of your
Mules, Horses,
Cattle, Sheep,
and Fowl.
Since 1848 ihe foremost
‘Pain peliecer of the South.
Price 25c., 50c. and $i a bottle.
-
Take this to vour dealer and say you want
Mexican Mustang Liniment.
Farmers’ Co-operative Fire Insurance Co.
OF GEORGIA
COWETA AND MERIWETHER DIVISION
^J'The Cheapest and Best”^
CAMP & BLOUNT, Agents.
Office Farmers & Merchants Bank Building - - SENOIA, GA.
< >I< >1< >1 o
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
GEORGIA—Coweta County:
Notice is hereby g.ven to all creditor? of the es
tate of Sophronia A. Wheat, late of said county,
deceased, to render in an account of their de
mands to t he undersigned within the time pre
scribed by law. properly made out: and all persons
indebted to said estate are hereby requested to
make immediate payment. This Apnl 24. 1914.
Prs. fee. $3.75. T. F. RAWLS, Administrator.
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
GEORGIA—Coweta County:
Notice is hereby given to all creditors of the es
tate of Mrs. Nettie Maze, late of said county,
deceased, to render in an account of their demands
to the undersigned within the time prescribed by
law. properly made out: and all persons indebted
to said estate are hereby requested to make imme
diate payment. This April 24.1914. Prs. fee, $3.75.
T. F. RAWLS, Administrator.