Newspaper Page Text
The Herald and Advertiser
•The Herald and Advertiser” office ia upstairs
In the Carpenter Building, 7 1 a Greenville street.
'Phone 6.
AFTER SUFFERING
TWO LONG YEARS
Mrs. Aseiin Was Restored to
Health by Lydia E. Pink-
ham's Vegetable
Compound.
Minneapolis, Minn. —“After my little
one was born I was sick with pains in
, my sides which the
| doctors said were
j caused by infiamma-
I tion. I suffered a
Igreat deal every
month and grew very
thin. I was under the
doctor’s care for two
long years without
‘ any benefit. Finally
after repeated sug
gestions to try it we
-I got Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound. After tak
ing the third bottle of the Compound I
was able to do my housework and today
I am strong and healthy again. I will
answer letters if anyone wishes to know
about my case.” —Mrs. Joseph Aselin,
628 Monroe St.,N.E.,Minneapolis,Minn.
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound, made from native roots and
herbs, contains no narcotics or harmful
drugs, and today holds the record of
being the most successful remedy we
know for woman’s ills. If you need such
a medicine why don’t you try it?
If yon have the slightest doubt
that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta
ble Compound will help you,write
to Lydia E.Pinkliam MedicineCo.
(confidential) Lynn,Mass., for ad
vice. Your letter will be opened,
read and answered by a woman,
and held in strict confidence.
Professional Cards.
W. L. WOODROOF,
PHYSICIAN ANDSURGEON.
Office 11 Mi Greenville street. Residence 9 Perry
Btreet. Office 'phone 401; residence 'phone 451.
D. A. HANEY,
PHYSICIAN ANDSURGEON.
Offers his professional service to the people of
Newnan, and will answer all calls town or coun-
Office over First National Bank.
THOS. J. JONES,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
Office on E. Broad street, near public square.
Residence next door to Virginia House.
T. B. DAVIS,
PHYSICIAN ANDSURGEON.
Office-Sanitorium building. Office 'phone 5—1
call; residence 'phone 6-42 calls.
W. A. TURNER,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
Special attention given to surgery and diseases
of women. Office 19K 1 Spring street. 'Phone 230
F. I. WELCH,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
Office No. 9 Temple avenue, opposite public
■chool building. 'Phone 234.
THOS. G. FARMER, JR.,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Will give careful and prompt attention to all
legulbusines entrusted to me. Money to loan
Office in court-house.
Cut-Price Repairing
All Work Guaranteed
batches cleaned
Mainspring
Clocks cleaned
Mainspring
. 50c
50c
50c
50c
Also repair guns, pistols, sewing ma
chines, typewriters, adding machines,
cash registers; locks repaired and keys
fitted; safes opened and combinations
changed. All work first-class in every
way. Remember the place.
R. W. THOMAS
Old RusBell Warehouse. Residence 'phone 38
vwvvm
Atlanta and West Point
railroad company
arrival and departure
OF TRAINS AT NEWNAN. GA.
EFFECTIVE JAN. 19, 1914.
Subject to change and typographical
errors.
?i 0, 7:25 a. m.
J,"- W 7:50 a. in.
J." W> 6:85 p.m ^
J." 5:37 p. U1.
•V’ 42 6:43 a. ru
T ft:::.
v ’ico pi Hi:
v 7' 6:23 p. m.
So ‘ ^ 10:23 p.m.
■^[trains daily. Odd numbers,
sLUthhound; even numbers, north
bound.
All kinds of job work done
w 'th neatness and dispatch at
this office.
Obituary.
All hearts of our town were shocked
and grieved Thursday afternoon when
the sad news was spread throughout the
place that Mr. Bennett Evans, one of
our oldest citizens, had suddenly fallen
dead in his field about two miles from
Whitesburg. He drove away from
home in his wagon out to his farm
right after dinner, happy, jolly, and ap.
parently in his usual health. Mr.
Charlie Jones, his son-in-law, Mr. Jer
ry Tate, Mr. Leon WatkinB, and probably
some others, were working in the field
not a great way from the place where
Mr. Evans was working, they having
been helping him to do some clean
ing up. Mr. Evans called “Charlie” to
Mr. Jones, but before the latter could
reach Mr. Evans he had fallen to the
ground, and only breathed a time or
two. His funeral was conducted by his
pastor, Bro. G. B. Barton, and Bro. J.
W. McLeod, at theM. E. Church on the
afternoon of April 17. A large gather
ing of friends and relatives came to
pay the last token of honor and love
at the bier of deceased. The floral
tributes were a lavish and beautiful
testimony of the immortelles within the
hearts of the people among whom he
dwelt. There is no command of lan
guage bestowed upon us with which we
can express adequately our profound
personal sorrow, and our sympathy
with the griefstricken family. The
invalid wife who had walked by his side
in "sunshine and Bhadow” for forty-six
years, of whom he was constantly
thoughtful and anxious for her com
fort and welfare, has our greatest
sympathy. She is bereft indeed.
We mingle our tears with those of the
sorrowful daughter, son-in-law, and
children. We realize with them that
they have lost for a time one who had
been their faithful, loving friend and
protector all their liveB, and from the
depths of a heart full of sympathy it is
our joy to remind them of the blessed
promises of a reunion in that beautiful
city that is lighted by the glory of God,
and the Lamb, in which light the nations
of them that are saved do walk.
“When the holy angels meet us,
Ab we go to join their band.
Shall we know the friends that greet us
In the glorious Spirit Land?”
We must look forward to meeting the
glorified spirit of Mr. Evans in God’s
own good time. He was a soldier here.
Ah! thrice a soldier. He answered to
the bugle blast of pressing need in the
earlier part of the sixties when he was
just barely old enough to go, and showed
true courage in the “times that tried
men’s souls.” He was a daily fighter—
a commander of spirit in the common
battles of life, and, greater than all, an
humble “Soldier of the Cross, a fol
lower of the Lamb.” For years a
member of the M. E. church, and faith
ful lover of his church and congrega
tion. As we pen these lines of tribute
to his memory we almost feel that we
can hear his voice as it used to Bound
when he knelt in the presence of his
God between the four walls of the M.
E. church in Whitesburg, and poured
out the feelings of his soul in simply
designed words of honest, fervent pe
tition to the Giver of all good gifts.
And we know that the ravages of time
must lay a heavy hand upon our mem
ory ere we cease to see images of him
in our mind, as he went about his daily
work. He was always joyous in his
personal hope of the crown.
Whitesburg, Ga.
Politeness in Business.
With the vast majority, to be rude is
to drive business irrevocably from the
door. It will not come back in humil
ity, hat in hand, to sue for favor. In
the stern competition the patronage
will go the purveyor who is suave of
manner and bland of aspect and defer
ential in his treatment of his customers.
We all like to be individualized. We
like to have the head waiter call us by
name in the presence of others. We
are pleaBed when the custodian of our
hat remembers that it is ours. "How
did you know that was my hat?” said
Dr. Eliot of Harvard to a doorkeeper
at a hotel. “Sir,” was the courteous
response, “but I knew it was the one
you gave me.”
Who would not prefer to trade with a
polite dealer? Of two men, one re
fuses a request with such graciousness
that it seems as though he conferred a
favor. The other allows a reluctant
concession to be wrung from him with
such a black visage that it is tanta
mount to a peremptory denial. The man
who has not given gets more “credit
for it” than he who granted what was
wanted—and all because he knew how
to say “No” so charmingly that it was
almost a pleasure rather than a disap
pointment to receive a negation of such
exquisite urbanity.
You Agree With Her.
Ellis Parker Butler, the well-known
writer, unlike many of his fellow
knights of the pen, does not come out
flat-footedly and express his opinion of
the spring styloa in women's gear;—he
lets Suzanne, the breezy stenographer
with whom all newspaper readers of
the country feel well acquainted, do it
for him.
“Say, honest,” says Suzanne, “when
a girl looks at some of these new
spring styles she don’t care whether
there is peace or war or anything. 1.
guess these wireless %ires have spilled
so much electric juice into the atmos
phere that everybody is getting pink
sparks in the brain. When I get rig
ged up in a nice head of purple hair and
a pair of Btockings embroidered “Oh,
you kid!” on the instep, and a neat lit
tle jacket with six tails overlapped like
shingles, and a skirt that looks like one
leg of a pair of Zouave trousers, only
split beyond the hope of redemption,
and a slab of a hat on one side of my
shell-like ears, I won’t care whether
Garcia Penetella whips Caramha Tarara
or not.
This spring’s fashions are some
what like what Sherman said war was.
Now, take this skirt, for instance. It
is all that and more, even if a thin wo
man has it, and what would it be on a
fatty I refuse to say, as the answer
would tend to degrade and incriminate
me. The little old Rue de la Paix has
given us women ample cause for war.
I’ll be one of any regiment of Amazons
enlisted to give Paris a swat in the
collar. I’m enlisted. This style busi
ness has got to stop before the lower
rim of the corset begins to catch on to
the upper rim of our dancing pumps.
“Excuse me for speaking plainly, but
the corset is now a household word.
Ever since the soda cracker became a
biscuit and every tire in the world be
came the one and the only best, the cor
set’s modest portrait has smiled from
the pages of the public prints. It is as
familiar as the teeth that Hse the soap
and the head that grows the hair. Yes,
we’ve got to swat the cubist Btyle
gang even if the gutters of Paris run
so deep with man milliner’s blood that
you could float a bond issue in them.”
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.
Fragrant—
V\,
In Loving Memory of T. M. Braswell.
On the morning of Feb. 28, Bhortly
after the darkness of night had yielded
to the light of another day, the family
circle was suddenly torn asunder and
the sweet, tired spirit of husband and
father left its earthly home for one
“not made with hands, eternal in the
heavens.” Dead? No, not dead; only
sweetly sleeping.
The subject of this sketch was born
May 13, 1878. Just in the prime of
young manhood, when all looked bright
and happy, with his sweet, loving little
family around him, he was called to
suffer and pass from our mortal view.
Never strong in body, he suffered the
most excruciating pain for over a year;
but, oh! how patiently he bore it all!
Not a murmur escaped his lips. He
was always hopeful for the best, trying
even in his awful suffering to make it
pleasant for those around him. He
longed to get well, that he might care
for his dear loved ones.
He was honest and upright in his
dealings with his fellow-man; was a
kind, obliging neighbor, and a loving hus
band and father. Oh, how we do miss
him, but feel that he is now “safe in
the arms of Jesus, ” where there is no
more suffering or sorrow. He told us a
while before he left us that all was
well with him; that he had for many
years had a sweet hope in Christ, and
did not fear to cross over the river of
death. What a sweet consolation to the
dear ones left behind! May He “who
tempers the wind to the shorn lamb”
bind up the broken heartB of the dear
wife and two little oneB—the aged
father, brothers and sisters—and may
we all Btrike hands on that happy shore
where there is no more sorrow, and
partings come nevermore.
Brother, thou art gone to rest:
Thy toils and cares are o’er,
And sorrow, pain and suffering now
Shall never grieve thee more.
Brother, thou art gone to rest.
And thiB shall be our prayer—
That when we reuch our journey’s end.
Thy glory we may share.
Lutherville, Ga. Sister.
PSiiK.v;
Mellow- F resh -Cool -
Smooth-Mild.
So delightfully satisfying in so
many ways.
dS'ft s -
I in Humidors and the Pound Glass Humidor.
LliliqqUuMf
“ *1II* • ,
“No lute,
“No Sting,
“No Bag,
“No String.”
TAG
For Pipe and Cigarette
EVER-LASTING-LY GOOD”
Lorlllard Co. Est. 1760"
A coat now and then of Davis’ Old
Colony Wagon Paint preserves your
wagons and farm implements and makes
them look like new.
Fir sale by W. S. ASKEW CO., New-
nan, Ga.
SERIOUS CATARRH
YIELDS TO HYOMEI
You Breathe It
Be wise in time and use Hyomei at
the first symptom of catarrh, such as
frequent head colds, constant sniffling,
rising of mucus, or dropping in the
throat. Do not let the disease become
deep-seated, or you are in danger of
a serious if not fatal ailment.
There is no other treatment for ca
tarrh, head colds, etc., like the Hyomei
method, none just as good, so easy and
pleasant to use, or that gives such quick,
sure and lasting relief. You breathe
it—no stomach doaing. John R. Cates
will refund your money if you are not
benefited.
Try Hyomei at once and see how
quickly it clears the head, stops the
sniffling, and banishes catarrh. Hyomei
helps you to enjoy good health. All
druvgists sell it. Ask for the complete
outfit—$1.00.
Make Your Candidate Tell Where
He Stands.
ProBTe.Blve Farmt-r.
“Every time heretofore that we have
sent a candidate to the Legislature from
our county,” said a public-spirited citi
zen to the writer yesterday, “we have
been buying a pig in a poke. We didn’t
know where he stood about anything.
In fact, a candidate seemed to think it
hiB purpose to keep the people from
knowing where he stood instead of to
let them know. But we are going to
change all that this year,” he went on.
“I don’t know who’s going to be our
Senator, but one thing sure, ho has got
to tell the people where he stands. He
has got to give up his platform.”
It is to be hoped that voters in a
thousand counties in the South are feel
ing the same way. Our farmers need
to give less attention to electing candi
dates and more attention to selecting
them. Have a county platform if pos
sible, but if you can’t get that, at any
rate make every candidate for the
Legislature give his views on all issues,
and then vote for him according to
whether his platform is good or poor.
The only real test is as to how a candi
date stands on those measures for the
upbuilding oi the county and the State.
We have said that we want to see more
farmers in the Legislature, but we had
rather have a constructive, progressive
lawyer any time than a standpat, un
progressive farmer. We have known
some farmer legislators who had be
come ultra-conservative and “sot in
their ways” and did more harm to the
farmers' interests than anybody else in
the Legislature.
“Another Chicago woman haH mur
dered her husband for treating her bru
tally.”
“That ought to be a lesson to him.”
MAKES BACKACHE
QUICKLY DISAPPEAR
A Few. Doses Relieves AH Such
Miseries. Bladder Weakness,
Kidney Trouble and Rheu
matism Promptly Vanish
It is no longer necessary for any
©ne to suffer with backaching, kid
ney trouble, have disagreeable blad
der and urinary disorders to contend
with, or be .tortured with rheuma
tism, stiff joints, and its heart-
wrenching pains, for the new discov
ery, Croxone, quickly and surely re
lieves all sqch troubles.
Croxone is the most wonderful
remedy yet devised for ridding the
S n Ste u 1 °* H r * c ac *d. an d driving out
all the poisonous impurities which
cause such troubles. It is entirely
different, from all other remedies. It
is not like anything else ever used
for the purpose. It acts on the prin
ciple of cleaning out the poisons and
removing the cause.
It soaks right in through the walls,
membranes and linings, like water in
a sponge, neutralizes, dissolves, and
makes the kidneys sift out and filter
away, all the uric acid and poisons
from the blood, and leaves the kid
neys and urinary organs clean,
strong, healthy and well.
It matters not how long you have
suffered, how old you are, or what
you have, used, the very principle of
Croxone is such, that it is practically
impossible to take it into the human
system without results. There is
nothing else on earth like it. It
starts to work the minute you take it
and relieves you the first time you
use it.
If you .suffer with pains in your
back and sides, or have any signs of
kidney, bladder troubles, or rheuma
tism, such as puffy swellings under
the eyes or in the feet and ankles, if
you are nervous, tired, and run down,
or bothered with urinary disorders,
Croxone will quickly relieve you of
your misery. You can secure an orig
inal jjackage of Croxone at trifling
cost from any first-class druggist.
All druggists are authorized to per
sonally return the purchase price if it
fails in a single case.
FOR YOVR PROPERTY’S SAKE-
Mastic Paint
SPECIFY IT IN YOUR CONTRACT^
THc. BEST PAINTERS everywhere use it because it is a |
guaranteed paint and gives universal satisfaction. Covers J
more surface, spreads easily, holds its color, wears and
lasts longer than any other paint you can use. It’s
“The Kind TKat Lasts”
Let us show you some fine
color combinations and tell
you all about the iron-clad
guarantee under which
Mastic Paint is sold by us
and backed by its makers
—the old reliable firm of
Peaslee-Gaulbert Co., of
Louisville, Ky.
Forty years’ reputation is
the record behind Mastic
Paint. The formula is on
*every can. You can easily
apply it yourself if you
haven’t a painter to do it
for you.
liiii
Cppp Ask us for handsome illus-
* IvL,ILi trated book on ‘‘Homes and
How to Paint Them.’’ It’s Free.
W. S. ASKEW CO
NEWNAN - - GEORGIA
Our Southern Friends are Proud of Mexican Mustang Linimer.! [;!•
because it has saved them from so much suffering. It soollu-o Kf
and relieves pain soon as applied. Is made of oils, without id
any Alcohol and cannot burn of Sling the llcsh. Hundreds M,
of people write us that Mustang
Liniment cured them when all
other remedies failed.
MEXICAN
Mustang
Liniment
The Great Family Remedy for
Sore Throat,
Mumps,
Cuts, Burns,
Rheumatism,
Sprains,
Colds,
Lameness,
Backache,
Scalds,
Bruises
and the ailments of your
Mules, Horses,
Cattle, Sheep,
and Fowl.
Since 1848 the foremost
Pain Pcliever of the South.
Price 25c., 50c. and $1 a bollle.
tv
-
§¥.;v
ffi ■ s0:a. ■ ;*.
ml:'T
Take this to your dealer and say you want
Mexican Mustang
Lento
jg BUGGIES! BUGGIES!
^ A full line of the best makes. Best value for
the money. Light running, and built to stand
the wear. At Jack Powell’s old stand.
J. T. CARPENTER
t'XM&XWXGMVX,
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