Newspaper Page Text
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i
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The Herald and Advertiser
NEWNAN, FRIDAY,
MAY 2 9.
ONE DOLLAR A
IN ADVA NCR.
YEAR
dreda
letters.
Mr. Harry Hodgson, one of the lead
ing business men of Athens, writes the
Atlanta Constitution as follows:
"1 have noticed that two or three
Georgia newspapers have published ed
itorials to the effect that it would be
unfortunate for Hugh Dorsey to make
the race for Governor on the ground
that it would be bringing the Mary 1'lia-
gan case into politics.
“The objection is not well founded.
“It is true that the splendid mental
nnd moral character of Hugh Dorsey
has been brought vividly to public no
tice through the manner in which he
handled this trial. He is not a candi
date for Governor, but thousands of
people in this Slate, who admire and re
spect his manly bearing, not only in the
Phagan case, but in all other causes be
has ever represented, know that vie
have few, if any, men in the State who
could till the Governor's chair with
greater honor or more efficiency.
“We need a return of those good
times when the office would seek the
man and not the man the office. 1 be
lieve there is a more genuine and more
general desire to see Hugh Dorsey Go\ -
ernor than anv other man that has bei n
mentiomd. l'here is much genuine e .-
What the State Papers Are Say
ing About Hugh Dorsey.
Dallas New Km: "You can’t lose a
man like Hugh Dorsey.”
Thomasville Times - Enterprise:
“Hugh Dorsey is occupying the center
of the Btagc juBt now."
Rochelle New Era: "Should Hugh
DorBuy, the able Solicitor-General of
Fulton Superior Court, decide to run
for any office in Georgia, the balance
of the bunch may as well get out of the
way. He is more popular to-day than
Hoke Smith or Joe Brown ever was.”
Milton County Newn: “If Hugh Dor
sey will only allow his friends to use
his name, the only thing necessary for
him to do is to say which place he
wants. While the people are electing
him he can go right ahead with his Of
ficial duties as Solicitor-General. Just
make it known which seat you want,
Mr. Dorsey.”
Lawreneeville News-Herald: “There
is a hig demand in all sections of the
State for Hugh Dorsey’s candidacy for
Governor. In our candid opinion he
could more than double the vote of any
candidate for that office who has actu
ally announced, or whose name has
been mentioned in that connection. No
Atlanta paper would dare clip this item,
SB Leo Frank is managing editor of
them all. ”
Atlanta Constitution: "Press of im
mediate work has been such t hat Solici
tor Hugh M. Dorsey has been unable
to open bis personal mail during tbe
past I wo days. His mail Monday and
Tuesday was particularly large. One
man wrote from Baxley thut uh u re
sult of a straw ballot taken at that
place 42 out of 43 leading citizens fa
vored him for Governor. Mr. Dorsey
will endeavor to reply personally to
these communications us soon us he can
spure the time from his official duties.”
Macon News: “Hugh Dorsey has
been so well advertised that his name
is a byword. Ha has hundreds of un
known admirers. Ho has a political
strength that is his to command right
at present. Under such conditions
which he muHt undoubtedly appreciate
— it is not difficult to understand why
he has tentatively decided to make the
race for Governor. The likelihood of
his entrance into the race puts an alto
gether different aspect on the political
situ ation. ”
Atlanta Georgian: "There is no
doubt whatever thut the prospective
entry of Hugh Dorsey into the Govern
orship race has tremendously complica
ted several well-laid plans of other gen
tlemen with respect to that high office.
Dorsey is immensely popular with the
f ieople of the State at this time. They
nok upon him ns a public servant who
has been tried by lire and not found
wunting. Having won his spurs in the
Solicitor’ll office, and having abundant
ly proven his ability to take care of
himself with the best of them or the
worst of them, us the cuso muy be
many Georgians have written horsey
telling him that he should now he pro
moted in the lino of public service.
That. Dorsey will be a big fuctor, em
phatically to he reckoned with, is per
fectly apparent at this time. Many po
litical observers do not hesitate to pre
dict that he will he a sure winner. The
game ia young yet—and it is not ex
pected by Dorsey's friends that he will
win the high office of Governor without
a tight. Only they insist—und are ablo
to prove-that ua a tighter he is some
Dorsey!” |
Atlanta Cor. Macon Telegraph.
"Here you are! Git your Hugh Dor
sey cravuts only 25 cents. Show who
you are fer, people; Hugh Dorsey fer
next Governor, an’ u winner if ever
there was n winner.” That was the
raucous cry heard about town to-day,
adding another queer note to this more
than queer political year in the good old
State of Georgia. And it iH just a plain
statement of fact to add that these ties,
made of red, white und blue and hear
ing the lettering on the end: "For Gov
ernor—Hugh Dorsey — ” were going lit
erally like hot cakes. That there is a
very pronounced Dorsey sentiment here
abouts is unquestioned, and people com
ing in from about the State, especially
North Georgia, Bay the Dorsey senti
ment is very powerful, and that as con
ditions lie now he would sweep things if
he runs. Incidentally, it teems to he a
growing impression that Mr. Dorsey ia
going to run, and that some formal
statement will be made by him shortly.
It iB said that he would go right along
with his duties as Solicitor-General and
leave his campaign largely in the hands
of his friendB. Personally, he declines
to make any public statement, hut is
pleased at these evidences of wide re
gard, expressed personally and in hu.i-
' ‘ i of Tt
thusiasm behind the suggestion that he
make the race, and should he announce
there would he a great rallying to his
standard in all parts of the State.
"He is made of gubernatorial timber,
lie has a magnetic personality, and is a
natural leader of men. Above all, he is
clean, honest, fair, dependable.
"He is essentially modest, us men of
true greatness generally are. I do not
look for him to seek the Governorship.
It. is very probable, though, that the
demand for him will require his entry
into the race.
"He has what might well he termed
a master mind. No lawyer in Georgia
is more thorough or methodical. In his
last, great, case he was opposed by two
of Georgia's most successful, forceful
and most dominating lawyers. Some
might think that since his forensic bat
tle with these great lawyers was at
timeB keen and hitter that, all of his
characteristics were those of a tierce
fighter. He lights fiercely when neces
sary, hut an intimate acquaintance of
twenty-four years warrants me to speak
with real knowedge, and I can say that
I do not know a man of more gentle or
tender sympathies.
“If Hugh Dorsey consents to run for
Governor the people would have cause
for genuine satisfaction. We could not
have a worthier candidate.”
How to Keep the Boys On the
Farm.
In the current issue of Farm and
Fireside, published at Springfield, 0.,
Herbert Quick, the editor, writes a
most interesting editorial on the ad
vantages of having practical education
in rural schools. Following is an ex
tract from his editorial:
"If our boys and girls are given the
right sort of education at home they
will not. desert us and go to the city.
They will stay on the farm if they
are so educated as to feel that on the
farm they may become successful.
"In an Iowa county the rusul pupils
were examined us to what they wanted
to do with their lives. Most of the
boys, and almost all the girls, answered
that they meant to leave the farm
when they grew up.
“Two years afterwards the hoys and
girls in the same schools were uBkod
the same question. Most of the girls,
and almost all the buys, answered that
they meant to stay on the farm.
"What made the change? Just this:
The teacher had been giving more prac
tical work to do in the schools. They
hud been giving the touching a farm
slant. They had been working in thp
schools on farm matters, and the girls
had been studying cooking, sewing,
housekeeping and the care of home and
children. And they had forgotten
about leaving the farm. They had
been doing pleasant, interesting, prac
tical work, uml they were happy. They
had come to see thut there is just as
fascinating work, just as intellectual
work, just as big work, in the country
as any of them could expect to get in
the city—and much higher work than
most of them could expect. I think
few farmers in that county would be
grudge high wages to teachers doing
that sort of woik. ”
"What is an optimist, sir?’ a little
boy once asked.
"An optimist, sonny, is a man who
doesn’t care what happens, so long us
doesn't liappen to him."
He that would eat the kernel must
crack the nut.
7 HIGH-PRICED
DOCTORS 0. K. IT.
All Approve Dodson's Liver Tone as
the Safe Family Remedy for Con
stipation and Lazy Liver.
There are most excellent reasons for
the John R. Cates Drug Co. standing
back of Dodson's Liver Tone with an
unconditional guarantee to refund pur
chase price (50c.) to you at once with
out question in event of any dissatis
faction.
Seven of America's very highest-
priced physicians, who were consulted
regarding Dodson’s Liver Tone and who
analyzed this vegetable liquid remedy
carefully with all their skill, knowl
edge and experience, have all agreed
on its superior merit, harmlessness
and effectiveness. Dodson’s takes the
place of dangerous calomel in consti
pation, biliousness, slugglish liver,
sick headache, etc.
Each of these physician's fees was
heavy enough to stagger most men; but
their judgment is worth all it cost, par
ticularly if it will be the means of lead
ing more people to refuse to run dan
gerous risk by taking calomel and other
violent remedies.
Dodson's Liver Tone not only relieves
the sufferer from constipation and kin
dred ills, but does it easily and natural
ly, without ache, pain or gripe, with
no bad after-effectB, without interfer
ing with usual duties and habits, and
absolutely without danger — which is
one reason it can carry an iron-clad
guarantee. It has proved a boon to so
many that it is recommended for you to
try at once.
Woman a Puzzle.
Dorothy Dlx. In Atlanta Georgian.
When the Lord made man He took
all the contradictory human charac
teristics the He had left over and jum
bled them together, and made woman
out of them.
A woman is of frailer physique than
man, yet she can stand ten Limes as
much Buffering.
She is afraid of a mouse, hut she
will climb up ori an operating table with
a smile on her face, knowing she is go
ing to be cut to pieces and that death
waits for her at every scratch of the
knife.
The sight of a suffering dog turns
her faint with pity, but she voluntarily
faces the agony of crucifixion in
motherhood. t 1
She has hysterics if her seamstress
ruir.H a new shirt-waist, hut she meets
financial ruin with the calm courage of
a heroine.
She could not walk five miles on a
pleasure tramp, but Bhe can break the
long endurance pedestrian record in
walking a sick baby.
She may look as innocent as a cooing
baby, yet as worldly wise and -rheming
as Becky Sharp.
She may appear to he a three-ply
idiot, yet be a Solomon in petticoats.
She may love a man well enough to
die for him, yet nag him so that she
makes him wish he was dead.
She would do everything on earth to
] make her husband happy, except the
one tiling that would make him happy.
She strives to make home pleasant
| for her family, but she will never let
them do what they like in it if she can
help hetself.
She is strong for the truth, hut she
wants her husband to lie to her about
her growing more beautiful every year,
und how miserable he was when he had
to leave her behind when he went on a
pleasure trip.
She believes in justice. Except,
where her own children are concerned.
She keeps no books and has no bud
get and runs her house hit or miss
fashion, financially, but she does it for
about half what the most accomplished
man fiancier could.
She will pay $50 for a hat without
turning a hair, then have fits over a
50-cent luncheon check.
She gives million to foreign missions,
but withholds the tip from a poor
dairy waitress.
She will he filled with compassion for
the oppressed in foreign lands, yet
work her own maid fourteen hours a
day.
She can he a noble Christian woman,
yet treat a daughter-in-law or a
mother-in-law with more savage cruelty
than a red Indian would show in tortur
ing an enemy to death.
She can believe anything she wants
to believe, and disbelieve anything she
doesn’t want to believe.
She can see through a millstone, or
be blind as a bat, at will.
She is never happy unless she ia
miserable.
Her idea of having a real good time
is to cry on the bosom of a sympathetic
friend, and she prefers these handker
chief tragedies to bright and cheery
plays.
Her ideal of a perfect husband is a
man who remembers the time he first
met her, and the day he proposed to
her, and her birthday and wedding an
niversaries, and if he will send her
violets on these occasions he may
starve her the balance of the time, and
Bhe’ll still think Bhe made a great
match.
Her idea of a bad husband is a man
who merely works like a slave to sup
port his family and never pay his wife
compliments.
No man ever guessed the riddle that
we call woman. Providence never in
tended that we should. Otherwise
there would be no more marriage, for
it’s man’s curiosity about woman that
leads him to place his neck in tbe hal
ter.
Helps Kidney and Bladder Trouble—
Everybody Satisfied.
Everywhere people are taking Foley’s
Kidney Pills, and are so well satisfied
they urge others to take them also. A.
T. Kelly, McIntosh, Ala., says: “I rec
ommend them to ail 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.
It takes a real Christian to drive two
miles over a rough and muddy road and
arrive at the church in an exalted frame
of mind.
He that waits for dead men's shoes
may go long enough barefoot.
Don’t Be Wild, Girls.
Wildness is a thing which girls can
not afford. Delicacy is a thing which
cannot be lost or found. No art can
restore to the grape its bloom. Famil
iarity without confidence, without re
gard, is destructive to all that makes
women exalting and ennobling. It is
the first duty of a woman to be a lady.
Good breeding is common sense. Bad
manners in a woman is immorality.
Awkwardness may be ineradicable
Bashfulness is constitutional. Igno
rance of etiquette is the result of cir
cumstances. All can be condoned and
not baniBh men and women from the
amenities of their kind. But self-pos
sessed, premeditated and aggressive
coarseness or demeanor may be reck
oned as a State’s prison offense, and
certainly merits that mild form of re
straint called imprisonment for life. It
is a shame for women to be lectured on
their manners. It is a bitter shame
that they need it. Do not have impul
ses that have to he restrained. Do not
wish to dance with the prince unsought;
feel differently. Be sure you confer 1
honor! Carry yourself so loftily that
men will look up to you in regard, not i
at you in rebuke. The natural senti
ment of man toward woman is rever
ence. He loses a large means of grace
when he is obliged to account her a be
ing to be trained in propriety. A man’s
ideal is not wounded when a woman
fails in worldly wisdom; but if in grace,
in tact, in sentiment, iri delicacy, and
in kindness she should be found want
ing, he receives an inward hurt.
Grave Danger if
Blood is Disordered
Little Causes Develop Worst Kind of Trouble—No
Danger if Blood is Fortified.
The Blood if Purified With S. S. S. Will Resist All Germ Infection.
It is not a wise policy to put an old
head on young shoulders. Childhood is
the time for childish pranks and plays.
The girl will grow into womanhood soon
enough. Let them be children as long
as they can. Give them plenty of fresh
air and sunlight, and let them run and
romp as much as they please. By all
means give us hearty, healthy, romp
ing girls, rather than pale-faced little
ladies, condemned from their very
cradles to nervousness, headache, and
similar ailments.
AVOID OPERATION
Get Out From Under the
Shadow of the Knife.
Thousands of women on
the verge of serious sur
gical operat ions are saved
by a timely use of
Stella-Vitae the
Lti'( great female
r e e ™-
The us
ual fe
male troubles
are unnatural
and unneces
sary.
Taken in t imo they can be cured and
the operation avoided.
The tunic principle of Stella- Vitae
nicks you up and gives you new life and
hope, new desires and energy, new
strength and purpose in life.
For two generations Dr. Thacher has
been helping Southern women to better
ho 11 til, to more cheerful lives. Stella-
VUac is the means employed and evolv-
hv this celebrated physician from
‘ands of' test cases.
..i:y woman who suffers even in a
slight degree can be benefited by just
one bottle of this celebrated remedy.
Don’t put it off, don’t neglect yourself
and become old and care worn before
your time. Get a bottle of Stella- Vitae
from your dealer and if you find that
it does not improve your condition the
dealer will return full purchase price.
But it will help you. It will improve
your digestion, clear up your complex
ion and work wonders with your dispo
sition nnd appearance. Get a bottle
today. Don’t delay! Your dealer sells
this wonderful guaranteed-to-benefit
remedy in $1 bottles. Thacher Medicine
Co., at Chattanooga, Tenn.
FOLEY
KIDNEY
PILLS
•—-'•*1
Note These
Points
IotcMitinf to men and
women hiving Kidney
■ad Bladder trouble*
That Foley Kidney Pills ore suc
cessful everywhere with ell kidney
and bledder troubles, backache,
week beck, rheumatism, stiff end
aching joints, because they ere e
true medicine, honestly mede, thet
you cannot take into your system
without hevinf good results.
They make your kidneys strong
and healthily active, they regulate
the bladder. Tonic in action, quick
in giving good results. Try them.
For Sale By ALL DEALERS
There ure so many reasons why everyone
Should look in the blood for henltli that the
action of S. 8. S. ns a purifier ami preserver
Is of paramount Importance. We need so
"inch food, so much oxygen, so much water,
nil of which In right proportion maintain
nutrition. tint the liver, kidneys, lungs,
skin nnd bowels must all work In co-opera
tive harmony to convert the Intake and
expel It after It has served its purpose of
regenerating the tissues and mils of the
body. And this process Is repented every
few seconds throughout life. Now, ns It
happens with most people, the body does
not expel nil the waste and It remains a
destructive Influence to produce catarrh,
rheumatism, bolls, eruptions und n myriad
of troubles recognized as the result of
poisoned blood.
Remarkable tcBtlmonlnls linvc been writ
ten thut prove beyond question there Is no
blood disease but whut can be cured by
S. S. 8. And in nil those eases Hint were
treated with mercury, iodides, arsenic cup
per nnd other minerals with no permanent
effect, the most astonishing recoveries haw
been made by 8. 8. 8.
There Is not a blood taint of any nature
that enn remain In a system fortified by
Ibis most wonderful remedy, for It Is nli-G-
lately pure nnd contains only those cle.
ments that the blood naturally nsshnllat,-•
nnd which the tissues gratefully accent’
It agrees with the most delicate stomach,
even In those cases where the use of strong
drugs has so weakened the digestive system
that medldlne can not be given. <;, t a
$1.00 Imtllo of 8. 8. 8. at any drug store
and thus be assured of a complete cure nf
any eruptive blood disease. If your cure
Is peculiar and you desire special ndvie,
write to the Swift Specific Co., Medical
Dept., Swift Bldg., Atlautu, Ga.
AVOID DELAY AND
BY »PHONING 54
For Your Groceries, Provided You do so Be
fore 4 p. m. Saturdays.
“TEA ROSE” Flour and “WORLD’S BEST”
Flour, guaranteed to comply with all the requirements
of the Pure Food Law, and then some. Connoisseurs
after giving these brands a trial, will have no other.
Fresh fish every Friday and Saturday.
J. T. Swint
“TH El MULLET KING”
Newnan Georgia
Purling streams andlimpid lakes lure the fisherman
these melting spring days, and we don’t blame them. It
is fine sport—especially if you are equipped with fishing
paraphernalia such as we keep in stock. Everything a fisher
man needs may be had here—except “liquid bait.” Drop
in and inspect our stock.
Darden-Camp Hardware Co.
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
GEORGIA—Coweta County:
Notice is hereby given to all creditors of the es
tate of Mrs. Mary Floyd, late of Baid county, de
ceased, to render in an account of their demands
to the undersigned within the time prescribed by
law. properly made out; and all persona indebted
to said estate are hereby requested to make imme
diate payment. This April 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 Sophronia A. Wheat, late of said county,
deceased, to render in an account of their de
mands to the 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 April 24. 1914-
Prs. fee. $3.75. T. F. RAWLS, Administrator.