Newnan herald & advertiser. (Newnan, Ga.) 1909-1915, June 19, 1914, Image 4

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The Herald and Advertiser NEWNAN, FRIDAY, JUNE 19 ONE DOLLAR A IN AIIVANCB, YEAR Commercial Heroism. Cun Hall, in Calhoun TlmeB. No admiral of armored Meet, no gen eral at the head of an army, has ever displayed a higher order of heroism than those men of to-day who are lead ing the light for the extension of the empire of business. It takes a high or der of courage to meet the danger of the sunken mine, the mysterious men ace of the hostile submarine, the death- dealing power of the masked battery, but it takes a higher order of courage to equip a man for the more heroic task of extending the bounds of the realm of business. Consider the surveyors that penetrate the jungle where death watches at every step; the miners of tho far north where awful cold gripB every heart; consider tho millions of money, the priceless years, that are spent in lending forlorn charges in the endless warfare of trade. The man on the ob scure farm, the little merchant on the side street, the captain of industry who puts hundreds of thousands into a new venture are not these real heroes of the world? Men fall from tall buildings, they are crushed in wrecks, they die by the thousands in the fight, to conquer the wilderness of the world. These are the heroes of peace who never shed idood, yet they sleep in unknown graves, and their only reward was knowledge that they played well their part in the drama of life. To say that 'all these sacrifices are made for the sake of malting money is a great mistake. Look deeply into the (lowing ^stream of life. There is a class of men that are intensely selfish, who give themselves so completely to the task of commercial success that nature withdraws from them the power to enjoy anything else. These are the unconscious puppets of fate, condemned by their own selfishness to the joyless task ofjdoing the world's work. These men subdue the wilderness that a thou sand beautiful homes may be, yet they cannot enter into the peace of those homes; they buy tho art treasures of the earth,fyet they cannot see the joy that speaks from tho lights and and shadows of the canvas. These men thinkjthey urejare great, but they are not greatjexcept with the greatness that naturegivus them, and behind their noisy activities stands the silent ligure of Fate leading! them always, even in their blindness, to places where they can be used best to do the world’s work. And then we have that other kind of man, tho royal soul that makes ma terial riches tho means to the end of a noblcjand '.vast spiritual possession. They are intoxicated with the thought of the brotherhood of man. They believe in humanityfdaring and doing together for the good,'of all. Their souls are filled with joy at the thought that the day is coming when every man will have n chance to live a free life. These men plow and Jsing, they dream of great profit-sharing corporations where capi tal and labor urejbound together by an indissoluble bond of toleration and love. These men have visions, they cherish ideals, they preserve through all vicis situdes tho it honor of the nation and pence of the world. They are building a roud through the wilderness of man's perplexities to the Jbeautilul highlands of mankind’s universal helpfulness and joy. Here we have the two kinds of men that are doing the world's work; one going in joyless [unconsciousness to the task, the other with face uplifted to the light, toiling with hands for bread, dreaming and praying in spirit for bet ter things. Only One Entirely Satisfactory. "1 have tried various colic and diar rhoea remedies, but the only one that has given me entire satisfaction and cured me when 1 was afflicted is Cham berlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. 1 recommend it to my friends stall times," writes S. N. Calloway, Stewart, S. C. For sale by all dealers. A small, rather timid looking man entered a newspaper office and ap proached the clerk. "Are you the man who takes in so ciety news?" he queried, with nn up- pealing look. "Yes, sir," cheerfully replied the young man at the desk. "1 can take any kind of news. What have you got?" "Why,'.it's just this way,” said the caller, lowering his voice. "My wife gave a party last night. It was a bril- li int affair, and I am willing to pay to hive this report of it put in the paper." "We don't charge anything for pub lishing society news." explained the clerk, at the same time tuking the p -ottered manuscript and looking it over. "That's all right," was the reply. “You don't get me. 1 wrote this up mrself, and I put in a line that says. ‘Mr. Halfback assisted his distinguished wife is receiving the guests.' That's the way I want it to go in, and 1 don't care what the cost is, I want my friends to know, by George! that 1 still be long to the family.” Only One "BROMO QUININE” To get the genuine, coll tor full name. LAXA TIVE BROMO QUININE. Look (or signature ol K. W. GROVE. Curea a Cold in One Day. Stops cough aud headache, aud vrerka ou cold. 2$c. , The Man Who is Always "Going To." SucTPHfi Magazine. He meant to insure his house, but it burned before he got around to it. He was just going to pay a note when it went to protest. lie was just going to help a neighbor when he died. He was just, going to send some Mow ers to a friend when it proved too late. He was juBt going to reduce his debt when his creditors "shut down" on him. He was just going to stop drinking and dissipation when his health became wrecked. He was just going to provide protec tion for his wife and family when his fortune was swept, away from him. He was just going to introduce a bet ter system into his business when it went to smash. Ho was just going to call on a custo mer to close a deal when he found his competitor had preceded him and se cured the order. He was just going to quit work a while and take a vacation when ner vous prostration came. He was justgoing to repair his sidewalk when a neighbor fell on it and broke his log. He was just going to provide his wife with more help when she took to her bed and required a nurse, a doctor and a maid, He planned to pay for his local paper, hut the editor struck his name off' the list. John II. Cates Drug Co. knows about I.IV VEK-I.AX. You need it for your liver. John K Cates Drug Co. Beautiful Old Women. We occasionally meet a woman whoso old age is as beautiful as the bloom of youth. We wonder how it has come about—what her secret is. Here are a few of the reasons: She knew how to forget disagreeable things. She kept her nerves well in hand, and inflicted them on no one. She mastered the art of saying pleas ant things. She did not expect too much from her friends. She made whatever work came to her congenial. She retained her illusions, and did not believe all the world wicked and unkind. She relieved the miserable and sym pathized with the sorrowful. She never forgot that kind words and a smile cost nothing, but are priceless to the discouraged. She did unto others as she would be done by, and now that old age has come to her, and there is a halo of white hair about her head, she is loved and rev erenced. LIV-VEll- I,AX is guaranteed to re liove troubles resulting from a disorder ed liver. Pleasant to take and perfect ly harmless. John It. Cates Drug Co The talk turnei^ to the professional beggar the other night, when B. B. Comer of Alabama told of an incident that, happened in a metropolitan city. Party named Smith was going down the street one afternoon when he was approached by a beggar who looked like a cross between a ton of misery and a comic valentine. "Excuse me, sir," plaintively said the beggar, "couldn’t you give me the price of a small sandwich? 1 haven't tasted food for two days." Smith gave him a nickel and went on. Suddenly he remembered that lie had passed a place whore he intended to stop, and turned back. ITo was just in time to see the beggar coming out of a saloon. "Look here, you gink!” heatedly cried Smith. "You told me that you hadn't tasted food for two days, and yet you buy beer! ’ "Yea, sir," was the calm rejoinder of the beggar, “hut I hadn’t tasted beer for two and one-half days." ■■ "Oh, Luella! There’s a man just fallen off that next pier, and I think it’s your husband.'' "Well, dear, don't get excited; we'll soon know. If he doesn’t come up it’s probably Jim — he can’t swim, you know." How To Give Quinine To Children. FR1VR1 LINK is the trade-mark name given to an improved Quinine. It is a Tasteless Svrup. pleas ant to take nml does not disturb the stomach. Children take it and never know it is Quinine. Also especially adapted to adults who cannot take ordinary Quinine. Does not uauseate nor cause nervousness nor ringing in the head. Try it the uext time you need Quinine (or any pur pose. Ask (or 2-ounce original package. The uarne l-'iii BRIL. IN hi is blown iu bottle. *5 cents. Claims Flogging Killed Convict. LaGrange, Ga., June 15.—Allegations of a sensational nature regarding the death of Charles Partridge, a young white convict, in the county camp near Hogansville on Sunday afternoon, have resulted in an investigation by the cor- j oner, and may eventually mean a thor ough probe of the convict system of the county, Charges by Mrs. D, S. Partridge, the 60-year-old mother of the dead convict, that her son was practically Mugged to death will be threshed out Tuesday morning by Coroner Spinks. The Sher- ilf has subpoenaed Capt. T. V. Eber- hardt, boss of the gang, of which Par tridge was a member. Other witnesses summoned are Jimmy McMichael, a “trusty” named Lambert, Dan Denny and Grady Davis. It is alleged that relatives of the dead man found the body, which ar rived in LaGrange to-day, covered with Bears that indicate a severe (logging. Parlridge’B relatives claim they have heard that this alleged beating was given within an hour of his death; that he had claimed to be sick at the time and that the alleged whipping was partly administered because he refused to take the medicine offered him. Partridge was only 24 years old and had been in the gang but two weeks. He was serving a sentence for theft. He is survived by a wife and 2-year-oid child. Locating Lost Land. Albany Herald. The tax equalizers of Tift county have for several weeks been energeti cally trailing some 16,000 acres of land known to be in the county, but which for various reasons was not finding its way to the tax digest year after year. A system of cross checking was in stituted, and is already bearing fruit. Several thousand acres of land has been rounded up and placed on the digest, and property owners are looking through their titles for the purpose of making sure that none of their lands are among those unreturned. us the au thorities have announced that tax exe cutions will be issued against all land in the county not properly returned this year. It is a good work, and Tift county will reap the reward of its authorities’ zeal. There is probably not a county in South Georgia whose every acre of land is every year returned for taxa tion. There is no occasion for an in crease of taxes in Georgia, but tax equalization is badly needed, that all classes of citizens and property owners may bear their just share of the bur den of government support. The example of the authorities of Tift county is commended to other com munities in the State. There are to-day any number of men who do not like their jobs. Yet it’s nn fault of the job. It’s no fault of the man vtffio provided the job. It’s the fault of the job owner—you. You’re disgruntled and sour and indifferent be cause you don't go to work. You’d like your job all right if you let your self out. You're in the humdrum stage. Day after day you do the same things and have the same thoughts. You arrive on the minute, maybe, but you surely quit on llie minute. These are your trou bles, sir. Just as soon as you pull yourself together, make some noise and clear out of your old rut—you’ll like your job. Y'ou see, you want the linn to take nutice of you, but you don’t do anything to command notice. If you want to get talked and consulted with and advanced, throw your whole heart and energy into your work, and you'll begin to love it in spite of yourself. Indigestion and Constipation. "About live years ago 1 began taking Chamberlain’s Tablets after suffering from indigestion and constipation for years without finding anything to re lieve me. Chamberlain’s Tablets helped me at once, and by using them for sev eral weeks I was cured of the com plaint," writes Mrs. Mary E. McMul len, Phelps, N. Y. For sale by all dealers. Little Marie was sitting on her grandfather’s knee one day, and, after looking at him intently for a time, she said: "Grandpa, were you in the ark?" "Certainly not, my dear," answered the astonished old gi ntleman. "Then why weren’t you drowned?" Hen Hatches Out Turkey Buz zards. Moultrie Observer. Because she hatched out two turkey buzzards along with her brood of twelve biddies, a Colquitt county hen was so humiliated that she hung her head in shame. The faithful old hen wasn't responsi ble for her disgrace. She was the vic tim of a cruel and wanton joke, perpe trated by her conscienceless owner, who found a buzzard’s nest and extrac ted a couple of eggs, bringing them home and placing them under “old spec,” who was engaged in producing fried chickens. In due course of time the buzzard eggs began to show sigi s of life, and next morning two snow white members of the most detestab e of all the feathered species trotted out — and the old hen saw them! Her friends among the females of the feathered family playing out in the batnyard, when the queer brood mace their appearance turned away in scorn, and the roosters of the barnyard crowed their contempt from the fence-posts. It was a cruel joke to make an hon est, upright old hen be responsible fir the appearance of two buzzards among her nestlings. Get Rid of the Torment of Rheuma tism. Remember how spry and active you were before you had rheumatism, back- achp, swollen, aching joints and stiff, painful muscles? Want to feel that way again? You can—just take Foley Kidney Pills. For they quickly clear the blood of the poisons that cause you pain, misery and tormenting rheuma tism. The first question a man asks when he sees a girl Mirting is whether or not she is respectable. You see how it raises a doubt, at once. This being the case, surely no modest girl can afford to indulge this pastime. When the down is brushed from a peach the beau ty is so marred that it can never be re stored, and so when a young girl throws lightly aside that sweet and modest re serve so becoming to a maiden, and which so elevates her and enables her to command the respect of all, she loses her greatest charm and becomes rather cheap, to use no harsher term. Flirt ing may seem to the giddy and thought less girl to be very amusing, and she may even get an idea that she is quite fascinating, but it is a most degrading thing, and should be frowned upon by every girl who has an ambition to be come a worthy and charming woman. "He who puts his hand to the plow," screamed the crossroads orator, “must not turn back." "What is he to dn when he gets to the end of a furrer?” asked the audi tor in the blue jean overalls. "My Mamma i!*ays It’s Safe for | Children” 4-. CONTAINS (111 % NO W A stiff upper lip does not always in dicate success, but if maintained at a proper degree of rigidity long enough it will generally win out. For Sale My ALI, DEALERS Sheriff’s Sale-tor July. GEORGIA—Coweta County: Will be Bold before the Court-house door In New- nan, Coweta county. Ga.. on the first Tuesday in July next, between the legal hours of sale, to the highest and best bidder, the following de scribed property, to-wit: A certain tract of land on the west side of Church street, in the town of Grantville, said county and State, and bounded as follows: On the north by Willie Bullock and Geo. West, on the east by Church street, on the south by Dee Wil liams and Amanda Williams, and on the west by D. B. Lambert, being the tract sold to Jerry Bul lock by Mrs. Itura R. Leigh, executor of J. W. Colley, with the exception of one acre sold off to Willie Bullock. Levied on as the property of Jes sie Bullock and Jerry Bullock to satisfy a fi. fa. issued from the Justice Court of the 1139th dis trict. G. M.. in favor of W. A. Bohannon Co. vs. the said Jessie Bullock and Jerry Bullock. De fendants in fi. fa. notified in terms of the law. Levy made by C. A. Burks. L. C.. and turned over to me. This June 12, 1914. Prs. fee. $6.30. J. D. BREWSTER. Sheriff. Tobacco Salesmen Wanted I J'ARN $100 MONTHLY. Expenses. Experi- J ence unnecessary. Advertise and take orders from merchants for Smoking and Chewing Tobac co, Cigarettes. Cigars, etc. Send a 2c. stamp for full particulars. Hemet Tobacco Company New York, N. Y. Blood Troubles Are Often Hard to Locate Catarrh, for Example IVSay Be the Cause of Very Serious Illness. A Slight Trouble Often Brings Serious Blood Disorders. A clironie cold moons something wrong constitutionally. Pimples mean hod blood. Rheumatism moans faulty elimination. These nnd a hundred other symptoms nro easily recognized, but where Is the trouble. Where Is It located? What Is wrong with the bodily machine? If you will go into any first class store nnd get a bottle of S. S. S. you nro on tiie way to getting rid of those conditions that cause sickness and disease. But don’t lot anyone work off that old trick of something “JtiGt as good.” S. S. S. Is taken Into the blood lust ns naturally ns the most nourishing fond. It spreads its Influence over every organ In the body, comes through all the veins and arteries, enables all mucous surfaces to exchange inflammatory acids mid other irritating substances for arterial elements that effectually cleanse the system and thus put an end to all pollution. S. S. S. cleans out the stomach of mucous accumu lations, enables only ptire, blood-mnk'lnc materials to enter the Intestines, combine with these food elements to enter the c 'r dilation, and In loss than an hour h v work throughout the body In the process If purification. You will soon realize its wonderful In fluence by the absence of headache, n si. , > ily Improved condition of the skin and !» sense of bodily relief that proves how , nlotely the entire system was loaded with Impurities. You will find S. S. S. on sale at all dm - stores. If is a remarkable remedy for an7 and all Idood affections, such ns eczema rash, lupus, tetter, psoriasis, bolls, aud'i 1* other diseased conditions of the blood, i , special advice on any blood disease wri: • to The Swift Specific Co., 223 Swift i*.M - Atlanta, Ga. * Do not trifle with substitutes, Imitn. tions or any of the horde of “Just a- good” Counterfeits of S, S, S. Whenever you see an Arrow think of Coca-Cola T. S. PARROTT Insurance—All Branches Representing Fire Association, of Philadelphia Fidelity and Casualty Co., of New Yorh American Surety Co., of New Yorh Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Co., of Newarh, N. J. 14 1-2 Greenuille st., Over H. C. GlouerCo.