Newspaper Page Text
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NEWNAN HERALD & ADVERTISER
VOL. XLIX.
NEWNAN, GA., FRIDAY, MAY 22, 1914.
NO. 34
/I Special Sale of Linens
P. F. Guttino & C(B. are arranging for a Special Sale
of Linens, to take place on next
MONDAY.'
w JL>f
MAY 25
MAY 26
Their entire stock of dress and housekeeping linens will be offered for
the TWO DAYS ONLY at greatly reduced prices. A large assortment
of white and colored dress linens, linen lawns, linen sheetings, table
damasks, table cloths and napkins are represented in this sale. No sam
ples will be cut and no goods taken back or exchanged.
The Fact Remains
No amount of misrepresentation by the
peddlers of alum baking powders, no jug
gling with chemicals, or pretended analysis,
or cooked-up certificates, or falsehoods of
any kind, can change the fact that
Royal Baking Powder
has been found by the offl- >
cial examinations to be of the
highest leavening efficiency,
free from alum, and of absolute
purity and ivholesomeness.
Royal Baking Powder is indispensable
for making finest and most economical food.
jj 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
LOST OPPORTUNITY.
I meant each brimmina: hour to send
That promised letter to my friend;
The momentB flashed and broke like spray,
And I forgot that all things end —
That golden hour was yesterday;
I cannot reach my friend to-day.
The sunlight burns—an April whim
In shadow I remember him;
The busy world hums merrily,
But ns I work my eyes are dim;—
He could have heard me yesterday;
He cannot answer me to-day.
He may have thought I did not care.
My friend so sensitive, so rure;
I failed him, I who loved him well!
Dear God, how do Thy children dare
To trifle with Thy gift-to-day,
That fades so soon to yesterday!
a
'a
r.
What “Bee Dee” Means
“Bee Dee” on the label means REAL VALUE
'"side the package, and RESULTS and SATIS
FACTION after the contents have been used.
Always ask for “Bee Dee” when vou buy a stock
°r poultry remedy. “Bee Dee” remedies are pre
pared from pure, medicinal ingredients, in a scien
tific way, and are genuine medicines that you can
depend on.
STOCK a POULTRY
MEDICINE
LINIMENT—DIP
See Dee Healing Powder—Bee Dee Colic Remedy
Bee Dee
After using the Bee Dee
Remedies generally for
sometime, we take plea
sure in saying that they are
giving entire satisfaction,
and we cheerfully recom
mend them.
McMillcn Stock Farm,
Waco, Texas.
Yon can get them at
your dealer's.
P. B. fi
Dont’s for Wives.
By a Husband.
Don’t talk too much about what
"lovely limes” you U9ed to have when
you were “free and single,” or your
husband may wish that you were so at
the present time, and it iB a sad day in
the life of any wife when her husband
cher shes that opinion regarding her.
It is a sadder day still for him.
Don’t treasure up all your daily trials
for your husband’s ear when he comes
home at night.
Don’t tell him how bad the children
have been, or how hateful the kitchen
girl has acted, or how the stove
wouldn’t draw, or how the clothes-line
broke with the week’s washing on it,
or how the baby has cried all day, or
how badly the ironing has been done,
or how the milkman left milk that
soured in an hour, or how little ice the
iceman left for fifteen cents, or how
the grocer has sent bad eggs for good
ones. Don’t add all these things to
the trials your husband has borne all
day. He has had his trials, you may
be sure of that, and, unless he is an
exception to the general rule, he has
not said anything at all about them to
you.
Don’t “nag” at. him all the time.
That is the hatefulest little word I know
of, and the “nagging” practice 13 one
of the most vicious. Much should be
given a husband who has a “nagging"
wife—one whose tongue is never still
and whose every word is of fault-find
ing or complaint. Such a woman is a
blot on the fair face of creation, and
her husband has much to bear. What
ever else you may do, don't nag your
husband.
Don’t compare him to other men to
his disadvantage. Don’t tell him that
you “do wish” he were like this wo
man’s or that woman’s husband. Noth
ing can flatter him so much as your
openly expressed conviction that you
have the best and kindest and hand
somest husband in all the world. No
doubt you told him so once, and even if
you think differently now, nothing but
harm can come of you telling him so.
Don't go around slipshod and slovenly
before your husband. He may not say
anything about it, but it will have a de
moralizing effect upon him, all the
same. Don’t come to the breakfast
table with your hair in crimping pins
because you are going down town later
in the day and the crimp will all come
out if you take your hair down be
fore breakfast. Your husband won’t
see you when you are down town, and
he does see you now, and wouldn’t you
rather look your best before him than
before any other man in the world?
The time has been when you would
“mortified to death” had hecaught you
with your hair in crimping pins.
Don’t ask him to be both master and
mistress of the house. Don't ask him
what you shall have for dinner or bur
den him with all the family marketing.
Don’t expect him to oversee your ser
vants or to do things that, you, as mis
tress of your own home, ought to do.
He probably has his hands and his
mind full keeping up his end of the
row.
Don’t look for perfection in your
husband. He has not found perfection
in you, has he? Perfect men are so
rare in this world that if one could be
found he would be worth his weight in
gold as a dime museum curiosity, and
perfect women are equully rare. If
your husband is “as good as the aver
age,” be thankful that he is no worse,
and bear in mind that it rests largely
with you whether he grows better or
worse.
Of course, nearly all of these
“Dont’s” apply to husbands as well as
Wives. Men are no better than women,
nor as good—they have their failings
by the score, but don’t increase their
shortcomings by showing them the
weak side of your own characters.
Rheumatism Quickly Cured.
“My sister’s husband had an attack
of rheurnatiBm in his arm,” writes a
well-known resident of Newton, Iowa.
“I auve him a bottle of Chamberlain’s
Liniment, which he applied to his arm,
and on the next morning the rheuma
tism was gone. ” For chronic muscu
lar rheumatism you will find nothing
heater than Chamberlain’s Liniment.
Sold by all dealers.
He that wants health wants every
thing.
The Message of the Bells.
J. It. H., in Birmingham Nows.
On thequiet Sabbath day hear the
messhgo of the bells, tho old church
hells.
As their deep and mellow tones boom
out in the morning catch the meaning
of their message, catch tho spirit ot
their call. Know what they stand for
in the scheme of man’s existence!
As these bells peal forth their mes
sage in measured monotone, they should
Btir the memory of many a man whose
mind has turned to less majestic, more
material things.
How long have they rung out!
Not these bellH. porhups, but other
hells in other towns than Birmingham,
in other years than 1914.
What processions have been formed,
what a multitude of feet have been put
in motion at their bidding!
Long before the trolley carcatno with
its clang, of the automobile with its
muffled throb, the music of these bells
put men and women into motion. Their
melody mingles with tho earliest re
collections of childhood. Their call bus
led myriads into the ways of peace.
To many a man and woman in Bir
mingham the call of these church hells
came first in some far village, perhaps
in a distant land. And as they ring
out here to-day, so they ring in the old
old town back there, where their mel
ody perhaps held a deeper meaning,
where the spire from whieh the old bell
hung seemed more significant of life
and death and immortality, of the kin
ship of the race, of the brevity of
temporal existence.
Vast in its difference was that old
church from the church whose invita
tion pulsates through the atmosphere
to-day. It was a frame building, per
haps, weather-beaten and old, nestled
among green trees and surrounded by
gray stories—stones whereon is graven
the names of the faithful v ho have
lived out their day and have obeyod a
call more insistent than that of the an
cient hell swinging in the spire.
Old, gray anil solemn, but sacred to a
thousand tender memories, the picture
of that old church comes back to day
with the fanciful touch of vanished
hands, the music of Voices long rime
hushed.
Wonderful institution, that old
church, iiuw powerfully it shaped the
lives of men— how wonderfully it
moulded the character of women!
How nobly those men stood for the
majesty of divine law, how beautifully
the women typified the sweetness and
compassion of divine love!
But though the church may have
changed in its outward aspect since
those days when childish fancy saw per
fection in tho men and women who
were living witnesses of its power to
transform, it has not changed in es
sentials.
The same spirit that brooded over
tho ancient temple in the old graveyard,
guiding its little flock safely through
the trials of life and into the realms of
immortality, lives to-day in the great
piles of brick snd stone that rear them
selves in Birmingham.
It is the same spirit that guided the
church throughout the centuries, lead
ing it into ever broadening fields of
usefulness, making it an institution
whose blessings no man can number—
whose capacity to cheer, to comfort and
to strengthen is measured only by the
capacity of man to receive.
So hear these bells.
Theirs is a message of immortality.
They speak of things dating back to
the dawn of creation, and stretching
into the infinite future, but their story
is ever new, over filled with the power
to take broken clay and “mould it
unto perfection.”
Lady (in small Irish hotel)— “Waiter,
take away that bottle and put Home
clean water in it.”
Waiter “Faith, mum, the water’s
all right; 'tin the bottle that’s dirty.”
DECIDE YOURSELF
The Opportunity is Here, Backed by
Testimony.
Don’t take our word for it.
Don’t depend on a Htrunger’s state
ment.
Head Newnan indorsements.
Bead tho statement of Newnan citi
zens.
And decide for yourself.
Here is one case of it;
W. T. Lazenby, 04 Wesley St., New
nan, (ia., says: “The secretions from
my kidneys passed too frequently and
1 suffered from my back. I tried many
repiedies, but they all failed to help
me until I got Doan’s Kidney Pills
from the Lee Drug Co. One box of
this remedv relieved me. My opinion
of Doan’s Kidney Pills is just as high
to day as it wan some years ago, when
I indorsed them, i have not been both
ered by kidney complaint since.”
Price 50c, at all dealers. Don’t
simply ask for a kidney remedy—get
Doan’s Kidney Pills-the same that
Mr Lazenby had. Foster-MiIburn Co.,
Props., Buffalo, N. Y.