Newspaper Page Text
*
Banish the “Blues!”
\t you have that depressed feeling it’s more than likely that your
blood is out of order—impoverished or poisoned.
There is only one tiling that will alter your present condition—
that’s to restore your stomach to normal health and strength. For
a wenk or diseased stomach cannot make good blood. If your
digestion is bad your food will not make the good blood which
nourishes body, brain, heart and nerve.
Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery
hulpB the stomach to do its work naturally and properly. Stimulates
the liver. The system is freed from poison. The blood is purified.
Every organ is rejuvenated. Instead of the “Blues,” you feel fit and
strong, equal to any tusk or up to any pleasure.
This great remedy has proved its worLh year after year for over
fortji years. Let it prove its worth to you. Sold by medicine dealers
in tablet or liquid form or send 50c for trial box by mail.
Send 31 onr-c.nl iilnmp* In pny co.t of mnilinu only nn a Iron cop- of Dr. Plorcr't Com
mon Sonin Modlul Advinur, 1008 p«ni--,,clolliboumJ. Addro.i Dr. V.M. Pierce, Buffalo.
The Herald and Advertiser
NliWNAN, F RI D A Y, J U N E 1 0
KEEPING THE PEACE.
Dorothy Dlx, In Atluntu OuorKian.
The tineBt art in the world ih the art
of keeping the peace. On our ability
to get along harmoniously with other
people depends not only our success to
a large degree, hut our happiness in
life, yet the majority of people never
think it worth while to study even the
rudiments of the science of keeping off
of other people's toes.
The average individual goes through
life like a bull through a china shop,
smashing into other people's cherished
beliefs, knocking over their pet opinions,
trampling under foot their prejudices
and hobbies. This raises up for him
enemies at every turn, who stand in
his pathway and block bis progress, for
no reason at all except that they don’t
liko him, and they don’t like him lie-
cause he doesn't understand the gentle
art of keeping the pence.
Of course, there are times when all
of us have got to oppose other people
and fight them. There are times when
it is pusillanimous and cowurdly not to
stand up and pul up the bestscrap that
is in you. But !)!l per cent, of our light
ing is utterly useless, and if we would
put one-tenth of the strength that we
do in combating other people’s idiosyn
crasies to walking around them with
out bumping into them we would get
better results.
For it. iH a rock-ribbed truth that peo
ple will do things for us because they
like uh that they would not do for us
because it is our right, to save our
lives. Our follow creatures may owe
us certain obligations, hut we’ve got
no way of collecting them unless they
chooBo to pay. That is what makes the
ability to make friends one of the
greatest assets anyone can possibly
possess.
Tho art of keeping the peace will
carry you further than any other one
thing in the world. Without it indus
try fails of its reward and genius dies
stillborn. No matter how capable a
man or woman may be, if he or she
cannot get along with other people, no
body wants him or her.
"Jones is n splendid fellow, a glutton
for work, and he knows all about the
business,” a merchant will say, "but 1
had to let him go because he's so cross
nntl surly .ho was driving my best cus
tomers away.” "Smith ia the best
workman 1 ever had, hut he kept the
shop in a ferment with hia temper, and
so 1 had to dismiss him,” a factory
owner will say. "Miss Brown waa an
expert stenographer, but she couldn't
get along will! anybody in the ollice,
so we had to tire her,” ia tho explana
tion of why ninny a girl loaes n good
job. “Of course, Mias So-snd-So is
the very woman for the part,” says the
theatrical manager, “but she’s never
been in a company she didn’t break up.
1 wouldn't try to get along with her
for a million a year."
These are remarks that we hear every
day. Moreover, we see how they work
out in real life. We see the individual
of inferior ability, but understanding
the blessed art of keeping the peace,
going ahead of the disgruntled genius,
and we know ourselves that there is no
quality in the world that wo consider
more valuable in an employee or a fel
low worker than just .being agreeable
to get along with.
And if the art of keeping the peace
is valuable in professional life, in do
mestic life its price is above rubies. It
is the one and only panacea for the di
verve evil, for the thing that drives hus
hands and wives apart is not some
great sin, but just a million little disa
greeable tricks anil speeches that might
just as well have been avoided as not,
if they had understood the art of keep
ing the peace.
The trouble with most of us is that
we think that amiability and a pleasing
personality are solely the gifts of na
ture, and we fail to realize that they
are traits that may be cultivated. Un
doubtedly some people are more pacifi
cally inclined than others, but we
can all learn to keep the peace if we will.
Why should the ticket agent snarl
out repliea at you when you ask a
perfectly civil question in a rail
road office? Why should the shop girl
bite your head off, metaphorically
speaking, if you di.n't buy the first ar
ticle she shows you? Why should the
subway conductor throw an insulting
tone into his voice when ho orders you
to step livtdy there? Other ticket agents
and shopgirls and conductors speak to
you civilly and graciously, and, inci
dentally, they are the ones that al
ways move up higher, because they
practice the art of keeping the peace.
I know a lonely woman who, is al
ways bewailing her friendlessness and
feeling hurt because she is not invited
to places to which Bhe would like to go.
She doesn’t understand why she is left
out, and yet she is never in any com
pany in which she is not like a fire
brand. She invariably selects as her
topic of conversation something that
will mortify or offend one or more of
the other guests. Yet to bo popular
this woman would only have to avoid
Haying the cutting and sarcastic things
she does.
How easy it would be for a wife to
keep the peace by avoiding the topics
that she knows affect her husband’s
temper as waving a red (lag does a bull!
What a little sacrifice it would be to
her to avoid doing tho things that ir
ritate him! How enormous the rewards
if she would only refrain fromnagging
him about his little personal peculiari
ties! How simple for the husband to
jolly his wife along instead of knocking
her!
How beautiful the rewards for merely
being pleasant, and yet with the majori
ty of people the art of keeping the peace
is as much a lost art as making Damas
cus steel.
Don't Lose Sleep Coughing at Night.
Take Foley’s Honey and Tar Com
pound. It glides down your throat and
spreads a healing, soothing coating
over tho inflamed tickling surface.
That's immediate relief, it looens up
the tightness in your chest, stops stuffy
wheezy breathing, eases distressing,
racking, tearing coughs. Children love
it. Refuse any substitutes. Contains
no opiates.
— ■
A Good Trader’s Defeat.
St. Louis Globe*Dmiocrnt.
Sam Farris was a candidate for a
Democratic legislative nomination in
Northwest Arkansas. He was defeated
in the primary and in making a return
of his campaign expenditures, accord
ing to Arkansas law, he was forced to
reveal the fact that his electioneering
tour was for him a source of income
and not of depletion. Beginning his
travels over the district astride of a
nag estimated by him to be worth $10,
he made eleven horse trades before
completing the circuit of his district,
and, at the finish, found himself in pos
session of $S0 in cash, paid as "boot"
in some of the swapping, and a mule
said to he in "fair to middling condi
tion."
Sam defeated himself for the Legis
lature. A man who, in canvassing a
district for an office, can, in eleven
horse trades, increase his original trad
ing value 1,600 per cent., and beginning
on a spavined plug with $5 in his pock
et, wind up his campaign on a fair to
middling mule with $80, must have the
genial qualities and winning ways which,
without sucli trading, would have given
him tiie nomination. But between the
end of his trip and the day of the pri
mary, the fact of his marvelous dexter
ity as a horse trader must have been
Hashed from hill to hill in words like
beacon fires. His victims hud time to
give the alarm. As there is in every
rural population a deep-seated preju
dice against a man who can heat every
body else in a horse trade, the political
fate of Sam Farris was sealed. In case
ho tries for a nomination again, he
should walk. .
A simple cross marks the spot which
investigators of Sinai have decided is
the place where Moses read out to the
children of Israel the laws of God. The
mountain itself must stand fer the
monument. Uus Sufsafeh, the eleva
tion on which the cross stands, is wild,
barren and rocky. About 600 yards
ftom the base of the mountain there
runs across the plain a low, semicircular
mound which forms a kind of natural
theatre; while further distant, on either
side of the plain, the slopes of the in
closing mountains would afford seats to
an almost unlimited number of specta
tors. Not far off there is an extensive
recess which was probably used as a
camping-ground. No spot on the whole
peninsula is so well supplied with water
and pasturage.
Invigorating to the Pale and Sickly
The CM Slumlord general *trcnfftheuinjr tonic,
CKO\ I! 8 T A8TE1.1.8S chill TONIC, drives out
Mnlnrin.enriches the bicod.arid builds upthesys*
tew. A true tome, l or adults aud children. .\c
Remember the Beasts.
Columbus Enquirer-Sun.
Hot weather is here, and already we -
are beginning to complain. We speak of .
it in a half complaining way, and forth
with we proceed to make ourselves as
comfortable as circumstances will per- i
mit.
It is well enough for us to avoid the
heat if wo can, to keep cool, hut let us
all remember that we have another
duty devolving upon us that is of much
importance.
The merciful man is merciful to hia
beast.
Are we merciful to our beasts? Do
we protect them as much as we cun
from the heat of the summer’s sun? If
not, we should do so.
It is true that we cannot keep them
in the shade all the time. The plow
horse, or the mule, or the draught ani
mal, must of necessity be in the sun
shine while at work. This is one thing
that cannot be avoided.
But when they are not at work we
can afford them a great deal more pro
tection perhaps than we are doing, and
it is our duty to do it.
Don't hitch your horse in the sun
shine to stand for an hour or more, but
find a shady place. Remember the
horse is in your hands, and you must
look out for it. The horse suffers from
heat, but cannot complain to you and
tell you how much it hurts,
ful to your horse, your mule,
Don't unnecessarily leave either of
them to stand in the sun.
Along this line the Montgomery Ad
vertiser offers some suggestions that
are worthy of your consideration. It
says you raise a row if anybody pre
sumes to interfere with your personal
comfort. Then why should you not
give consideration to these poor dumb
brutes that cannot help themselves?
The Advertiser further says:
"But what about the poor mule or
horse that is forced to work in any and
all sorts of weather, whether he is feel
ing good, whether he is suffering from
overheat, and thirst and heavy loads?
Is the brute not entitled to a fair share
in the physical comforts of life? Is the
brute not entitled to humane treat
ment, and a minimum of beating at the
hands of cruel drivers?”
The brute cannot explain his suffer
ings. He cannot call for water. He
cannot plead with his master at the
over-load and consequent over-heating.
His only hope for mercy is at the hands
of merciful human beings.
It is cruel and vicieus to impose upon
a dumb beast. It is particularly cruel
and vicious to impose on such a creature
in the summer months.
Get Rid of Your Rheumatism.
Now is the time to get rid of your
rheumatism. You can do it if you apply
Chamberlain’s Liniment. VV. A. Lock-
hard, Homer City, N. Y., writes: "Last
spring I suffered from rheumatism with
terrible pains in my arms and shoulders.
1 got a bottle of Chamberlain’s Lini
ment and the first application relieved
me. By using one bottle of it I was en
tirely cured." For sale by all dealers.
Two women who had not seen each
other for many years met unexpectedly
on the street.
"How do you do?” exclaimed one ef
fusively.
“Now, this is delightful!” said the
other, who was the elder. “You have
not seen me for 11 years, and yet you
know me at once. I cannot have
changed so dreadfully in all that time.
It flatters me.”
"Oh, I recognized your hat!” said the
first.
Wake up your liver. A lazy liver
brings on the worst of diseases. Take
LIV-VER-LAX now. John R. Cates
Drug Co.
Two friends, who had not seen each
other in years, met unexpectedly as
neighbors in a suburban town.
“Hello, Mason! Who are you working
for now?” asked Taylor, over the gar
den fence.
"Same people," came the reply. "A
wife and hve children.”
A MESSAGEJO WOMEN
Who Are “Just Ready to Drop.”
When you are "Just ready to drop,’’
when you feel so weak that you can
hardly drag yourself about—and be
cause you have not slept well, you
get up as tired-out next morning as
when you went to bed, you need help.
Miss Lea Dumas writes from Ma
lone, N. Y., saying: “I was In a bad
ly run-down condition for several
weeks but two bottles of Vinol put
me on my feet again and made me
strong and well Vinol has done me
more good, than all the other medi
cines I ever took.”
If the careworn, run-down women,
the pale, sickly children and feeble
old folks around here would follow
Miss Dumas’ example, they, too, would
soon be able to say that Vinol, our
delicious cod liver and iron remedy,
had built them up and made them
strong.
It is a wonderful, strength creator
and body-builder, and we sell it un
der a guarantee of satisfaction. You
get your money back if Vinol does
not help you.
P. S. For any skin trouble try our
Saxo Salve. We guarantee it.
JOHN It. CATES DRUG CO., Newnan
The Famous Cotton of Peru.
in America, says Frank G. Carpenter,
traveler and writer. The native Peru
vian cotton is sometimes called vegeta
ble wool. It has a long fiber and is like
wool in its texture. We use it to mix
with w-joI for making hats, hosiery and
underwear. It is said to give the cloth
a finer luster and to render it less liable
to shrink.
Indeed, this land seems to be the
home of the cotton plant. It was grow
ing here when Pizarro came, and he
found cotton cloth in the tombs of peo
ple who lived before the Incas. The
native cotton grows on a tree which
will continue to yield for 20 years after
planting. It is usually at its best at
three years, and after that it begins to
decline. The common method of plant
ing is to put the seeds in the ground
with a stick, and let the trees reach a
height of six or eight feet. After that
they are cut back from year to year in
order that they may be the more easily
gathered.
On other plantations a single sowing
is allowed to do for several annual
crops. The cotton begins to ripen about
ten months after it is planted, and the
principal yield is obtained when the
plants are 20 months old.
MANY ARE GLAD
OVER LIVER TONE.
Former Sufferers From Constipation
Now Improved Without Taking
Unpleasant Calomel.
Many, many thousands of people who
formerly suffered from constipation are
delighted with the relief brought them
by taking Dodson’s Liver Tone instead
of disagreeable and often dangerous
calomel.
Calomel is a poison, a form of mercu
ry, dangerous to many people and caus
ing unpleasant after-effects for nearly
everyone who tries it.
Dodson’s Liver Tone is recommended
as a perfectly Bafe and reliable remedy
to take the place of calomel. This is
exactly what it is made for, and has
been made for ever since the first bot
tle was put up and sold. It is widely
imitated. So be careful to get the orig
inal.
Dodson’s Liver Tone is sold and guar
anteed by John R. Cates Drug Co., who
will refund purchase price (50c.) in 1 -
stantl.y with a smile if you are in any
way dissatisfied.
Dodson’s Liver Tone is a palatable
vegetable-liquid. Its action is easy and
natural, witn no gripe, no pain, and the
after-effects are agreeable. Dodson’s
Liver Tone does not interfere with your
regular duties, habits and diet, and
builds and strengthens instead of weak
ening you or "knocking you all out”
for days, as calomel and strong purga
tives so often do. Dodson's may do for
you what it has for all these other hap
py thousands of people.
The I’uira valley in the great South
Be merci- American desert is the home of the fa-
your ox. mous native cotton of Peru, a cotton
which brings six or seven cents a pound
more in our markets than that we raise
'MMWKW.
You Need a Tonic
There are 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: “1 think Cardui is the greatest medicine on earth,
for women. Before 1 began to take Cardui, 1 was
so weak and nervous, and had such awful dizzy
spells and a poor appetite. Now I feel as well and
ns strong as 1 ever did, and can eat most anything.”
Begin taking Cardui today. Sold by all dealers.
Has Helped Thousands.
XmX
For that hot, “stuffy,”
“sticky,” “no-count”
feeling —
Cools -- Refreshes—
Stimulates
A delightful flavor
all its own
In Iced
Bottles
Anywhere
ALWAYS LOOK
FOR THE
7
LABEL
BOTTLED BY
CHERO-COLA
BOTTLING CO,
Newnan, Ga.
The above picture represents a PROSPERITY COLLAR MOULDER,
which uses an entirely new principle in collar-finishing. When finished on this
machine those popular turn-down collars can have no rough edges, and they
also have extra tie space. The collars last much longer, too. Let us show you.
NEWNAN STEAM LAUNDRY-