Newspaper Page Text
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The Herald and Advertiser
NEW NAN, FRIDAY. AtJG. 21.
ONE DO
LLiR A
IN ADVANCE.
YEAR
Beauty.
Maud Muller.
Definiteness is impossible in the de
scription of a pretty woman.
The color of her eyes, the shade of
her hair, the beauty of her complexion
and figure, and the charm of her man
ner, are beyond the accurate description
one gives of wnll paper.
And the handsomer she is, the more
this is true. Perfection in the human
face and form ia the most elusive and
baffling of all qualities. Only one knows
it is there, and admires with an enjoy
ment that takes no thought of face and
figure.
If you doubt this, secure the privi
lege of an interview with Miss Emily
Stevens, who plays the part of the will
ful and extravagant wife in “To-day,”
at the Forty-eighth street Theatre, New
York. You will come away with a vis
ion of a very handsome woman in your
eyes, and, if you are a man, it will be
also Btamped on your heart.
Her hair? Well, perhapB it is gold.
Anyway, it looked like the glory of a
perfect day.
Her eyes? bright and happy and
mirthful, with a radiant soul shining
through; who cares what are their col
or?
And her complexion? Could you de
scribe the most exquisite coloring you
ever saw?
“How do you work so hard and keep
so beautiful?” Miss Stevens was asked.
“Most women who have to experience
the gamut of emotion you feel every
night would grow haggard and old be
fore their time.”
Miss Stevens laughed. “1 don’t thinfi
about my looks,” she replied, “Some
times 1 think perhaps women lose their
good looks by thinking about them too
much. Not that I think that I claim
to have) any hauuly; but if 1 had, I
\yould notkeop it in my mind all the
time. The woman who steams her face
and massages it, and diets ar.d exercises
and rests and works with her mind
eternally on her figure or her complex
ion, dwarfs her intellect and her soul,
and a woman can’t be pretty when that
has happened. 1 never neglect my
health. There is no beauty when the
health is neglected. Then I pay some
attention—not too much —to the be-
comingness of hatB and gowns; no wo
man can afford not to do that. And I
never worry. Perhaps if I had any
beauty recipe to give the girls it would
be those two words: Don’t worry! There
is no cold cream that will undo in a
week the result of an hour’s worry.
Beauty specialists know no remedy for
eyes that are dulled by fretting. The
girl who worries puts wrinkles in her
face that no treatment will ever take
out. Another suggestion I might make
to girlH who want to be beautiful—and
what girl doesn’t?—is that they grow
interested in their work. I don’t care
what the work is. If a girl is interest
ed in it, and puts intelligence into it, it
Will rewurd her in many ways, and not
the least important of the rewards is
that she will grow better looking. She
will lose sel.'-consciousness, the most
deadly blow to good looks. She will he
happier, und happiness is the main as
set of beauty. She will acquire a self-
possession and assurance that will make
her charming in manner. Do you doubt
this? Then look at the men. Are not
the successful men better than looking
the failures? I tell you it is something
that comes from within, us well as
what is steamed in und rubbed on from
without that makes beauty."
Miss Stevens might have added, had
she been less modest, that this was the
plan she steadily pursued; Thinking lit
tle of her complexion, and more of her
life work. Enthusiastic to a degree
about the play, "To-day,” in which she
is leading lady, she plainly shows that
she is more interested in herself as the
“l-ily Wagner” of the stage than as
the Emily Stevens of real life.
“Beauty stcrets?" With a laugh she
dismissed the subject. "There are no
secrets about beauty. Perfect health,
intelligence, interest in one’s life work
and a refusal to worry. Those are not
secrets, and they are the greatest helps
to beauty.”
Not So Strange After All.
You may think it strange that so
munv people are cured of stomach
trouble by Chamberlain’s Tablets. You
would not, however, if you should give
them a trial. They strengthen and in
vigorate the stomach and enable it to
perform its functions naturally. Mrs.
Rosie Kish. Wabash, Ind., writes,
“Nothing did me the least good until 1
begun using Chamberlain's Tablets. It
is decidedly the best medicine for stom
ach trouble I have ever used.” For sale
by all dealers.
At the close of his talk before a Sun
day-school the Bishop invited questions.
A tiny boy, with white, eager face,
at once held up his hand. "Please, sir,”
said he, "why was Adam never a
baby?"
The Bishop coughed in doubt as to
what answer to give, but a little girl,
the eldest of several brothers and sis
ters came promptly to his aid.
"Please, sir," she answered smartly,
“there was nobody to nuss him."
The’Fiction of the Splendor of
Conquest.
Philadelphia Public Ledger.
While the troops sre marching to the
embattled frontiers the sovereigns are
calling upon women to show their pa
triotism by working in the fields and
taking care of the crops.
That is the glory of war for the wo
man. It is the tradition of aboriginal
people* that the warrior puts on his
warpaint, takes his accoutrements, and
then goes upon the warpath to meet
and slay his enemy, or be slain by him.
It is the woman’s part to pitch the
moving tent, prepare the food, carry
and tend the children, dress the wounds
of her liege lord, or mourn above his
burial. The tradition continues in parts
of Europe. While myriads of men go
forth to battle, to end their lives that
might have been usefully dedicated, to
wrest from their rivals lands and prop
erty, to burn and pillage and assassi
nate, the women remain at home im
mersed in drudgery outdoors and in-
doorB, taking on themselves a double
portion because of the absence of the
bread-winner. They are left a prey to
fear and grief that the map of Europe
may be revised after the charnel of the
trenches. Theirs is no part of the com-
raderie of the march or the campfire;
no bugles blow, no pennons wave above
their heroism. Is there any wonder
that some of them detest warfare as
the widow of a drowned sailor hates I
the sea?
The fiction of the splendor of con
quest, with no principle and no moral
purpose inspiring it, is about ended
so far as women are concerned. They
have seen too much of the shadows and
witnessed and heard too much of the
heartrending agonies of the battle’s se
quel, to glorify war. It throws upon
them an insupportable burden, not
merely of woe but of manual labor, and
if they had a choice they would seek to
end it forever.
In the Woman’s House Companion,
on a page devoted to suggestions for
happy vacations, a Kansas man con
tributes the following;
‘East summer I spent rny vacation
with my mother at the old home-place
where I waH born. It was forty years
ago that 1 had left home.
‘The dinner was served in the same
old dining-room, and when I tasted the
ham, hickory-smoked, and the eggs that
I got out of the nests while the hens
were utill cackling, and when mother
got out the jams, jellies and preserves,
l attacked everything just as 1 did
when a boy.
"Evenings, after our supper, mother
and I sat on the front porch and talked
over the happenings of the paBt forty
years, and when the time came to retire
I was put in my old bed, in the same
room that I had when a boy.”
The Twenty Year Test.
"Some twenty years ago I used
Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diar-
rhoho Remedy,” writes Geo. W. Brock,
publisher of the Enterprise, Aberdeen,
Md. "I discovered that it was a quick
and safe cure for diarrhoea. Since
then no one can sell me anything said
to be ‘just as good.’ During all these
years I have used it and recommended
it many timeB, and it has never disap
pointed anyone." For sale by all
dealers.
A school teacher exclaimed, impa
tiently, one afternoon;
"Johnny Jones, what are you fum
bling with there?”
Johnny hung his head and was silent,
but the telltale of the class spoke up:
“It’s a pin he’s got, ma'am ’’
"Welt, take it from him," said the
teacher, "and bring it to me.”
This was done, and then in a modified
voice the teacher said:
"Now, Johnny Jones, get up and re
cite your history lesson.”
But Johnny did not obey. He blushed,
hung his head and sat still.
"Johnny,” said the teacher, "rise, I
tell you!”
Then the little fellow blurted out,
distressfully:
”1 can't, ina'um. That there pin you
took is what holds me trousers up!” HA
Only One "BROMO QUININE”
To K
IVt
_«lh» xtnulne, call lor lull umt. LAXA
TIVE BROMO QUININE. Look lor .ignatur, o(
K W. GROVE. Curt, a Cold In One Day. Siopa
cousb And bcadacbe. And work. oil cold 25c.
Keep Your Liver Active During the
Summer Months—Foley's Cathar
tic Tablets for Sluggish Liv
er and Constipation.
It does beat all how quickly Foley's
Cathartic Tablets liven your liver and
overcome constipation. ‘ Nev Oldham,
Wimberley, Texas, says: “Foley’s Ca
thartic Tablets are the best laxative 1
ever used. They take the place of cal
omel.” Wholesome, stirring and cleans
ing. No griping. A comfort to stout
persons. For sale by all dealers.
Cool Off With
Refreshes = - Stimulates
A delightful flavor all its own.
In Iced Bottles Anywhere
Bottled by CHERO-COLA BOTTLING CO. Newnan, Ga
Selfishness.
Selfishness assumes many forms,
and In every one of them may be
found the desire to grasp some fan
cied means of happiness, even at the
expense of others. Many things In
nocently pleasurable in themselves,
when they come to ub in a rightrul
and natural manner, turn Into guilty
and fraudulent possessions when
sought and gained through the losses
or pain of others.
Good Glue. ,
Nearly every housekeeper who has
occasion to use glue for mending ar
ticles In the home finds that fre
quently after the glue dries the ar
ticle to which it has been applied
breaks, tears, or springs apart. This
can be remedied If glycerine Is added
to the glue in proportion of one part
glycerine to four parts glue, as the
articles mended in this way, "stay
mended" Indefinitely.
Cat of Ancient Mexico.
The Mexicun himself firmly believes
in the nine Btages of heaven and hell,
and the curloua cat of the Aztecs be
gan existence with its full quota of
nine lives. This feline of ancient
Mexico today almost extinct, was a
peculiar, even repulsive creature, be
ing absolutely naked, Bave for the few
sparsu hairB which appeared along the
ridge of its tail and back at the be
ginning of winter.
Why Divide Him?
Johnny begged to be taken to the
theater for the first time, and finally
his mother gave in. "Very well, dear,
tomorrow I will take you to see an
actress take the part of a little boy—
‘Peter Pan’ by name." Johnny looked
Bober. "W1 he asked, “will she
take the part of a little boy? Why
don’t she take the whole boy?”
A preacher, at the close'of one of his
sermons, said: “Let all in the house
who are paying their debts stand up.”
Presently every man, woman and child,
with one exception, rose to their feet.
The preacher seated them and said:
“Now, every man not paying his debts
stand up.” The exception, a careworn,
hungry-looking individual, clothed in
his last summer’s suit, slowly assumed
a perpendicular position.
"How is it, my friend," asked the
minister, "you are the only man not
able to meet his obligations?”
“I run a newspaper," he answered,
"and the brethren here who stood up
are my subscribers, and — ”
"Let us pray,” exclaimed the minis
ter. _
Harold, aged 6, had some trouble
with the children of a neighbor. That
night when he had retired his mother
asked if he had said his prayers.
"Yes, mamma,” he replied.
"And did you pray for the heathen,
too?” she asked.
"Yes,” he answered hesitatingly,
“all but the three next door.”
Tommy—"I’ve a question for you,
papa.”
Papa—“Well, what is it, Tommy?”
Tommy—“I saw a horse to-day that
a man said was piebald. Did he get it
from eating pie?”
Reduction of Fords
Buyers to Share in Profits
Lower prices on Ford cars effective from Aug. 1,
1914, to Aug. 1, 1915, and guaranteed against any
reduction during that time:
Touring Car $490
Runabout 440
Town Car 690
F. O. B. Detroit, ail ears fully equipped.
(In the United States of America only.)
Further, we will be able to obtain the maximum efficiency' in
our factory production, and the minimum cost in our pur
chasing and sales departments if we can reach an output of
300,000 cars between the above dates.
And should we reach this production, we agree to pay as the
buyer’s share from $40 to $60 per car (on or about Aug. 1,
1916,) to every retail buyer who purchases a new Ford car
between Aug. 1, 1914, and Aug. 1, 1915.
For further particulars regarding these low prices and profit-
sharing plan, see the
NLWNAN GARAQL
Highest Knowledge.
The establishment ... of a
clearly defined ethical and social ideal
as a touchstone of the tendencies of
all particular acta and policies is de
scribed in the language of poetical
Platonism as the acquisition of the
highest knowledge—the knowledge of
the Ideal of good.—Prof. Paul Shorey.
Against the Middle.
The planter was swapping weather
wisdom with Uncle Isaac, the old col
ored man who did odd jobs nbout the
place. 'How come, boss.” said Uncle
Isaac, "how come hit ulways seem so
pizen hurd fo' lilt to rain 'long ’bout de
middle oh a drought, but. when lilt git
long to’a’ds de eend. lilt don't seem to
have no trouble ’tall?’’
Rheumatic Throat
Is Common Trouble
Should Be Treated in Blood
To Prevent Recurrence.
Little Wendell Holmes Emerson, of
Boston, was resting sedately with his
book in the park shortly after a picnic
dinner. He had eaten too much. He
know perfectly well he had eaten too
much, and he was very much surprised
and shocked at himself. He prayed fer
vently that no one would notice his con
dition.
By this time a kind old lady sat down
beside him.
"My little boy," said she, "are you
over eight?”
It was wonderful to see how the
young Mr. Emerson recovered his dig
nity. That a woman with such out
landish grammar should dare to criti
cize him was unbelievable. "No. mad
am,” said he proudly, “I have over
eaten.”
The world has no use for the fellow
who never does a good thing until ne
cessity kicks him from behind.
Better Let Her Cry,
A woman Is almost as peculiar as a
man. She will break into tears, and
the more she is urged to cheer up
the more she will cry. Hut If some
one tells her to go ahead and shed as
many tears as she pleases, she will
at once quit crying and speak her
mind.—Atchison Globe.
Naturally Fortified.
”1 mil afraid that man Is going to say
something ho will be sorry for.” Don’t
worry,” replied Miss Cayenne: "people
who make a specialty of reckless talk
seldom have the discernment to be
sorry."
Judge Not.
Men have commonly more pleasure
In the criticism which hurts than in
that which is innocuous, ami are more
tolerant of the severity which breaks
hearts than of that which falls impo-
tently on the grave.—Ruskin.
, Tlicrr an 1 successful gargles that stop
soreness in the throut. but. to prevent their
Incessant return, the blood must be put In
order. The best remedy Is S. S. S., ns It
Influences all the functions of the body to
neutralize the Irritants or waste products
and to stimulate their excretion through
the proper channels.
Khoumatic sore throat Is a dangerous
Indication, as It means that the blood Is
loaded with more urle netd thnn the kid
neys can excrete, and may thus lead to
serious general disturbance.
The action of S. S. S. stimulates cellular
activity. It prevents the accumulation of
irritants In iocal spots. It enables the
arteries to supply quickly the new red
blood to replace worn-out tissue.
For this renson uric arid that finds the
throat an easy prey to Its breaking-down
Influence, Is scattered and eliminated. In
other words, S. S. S. prevents chronic con
ditions by enabling nil the mucous linings
of the body to secrete healthy mucus. Its
Influence is shown In n marked Improve
ment of the bronchial tubes, whereby the
huskiness of voire with thick, grayish ex
pectorations is overcome. S. S. N., well
diluted with water, means a blood bath,
since it Is welcome to any stomach and at
once gets Into the blood.
S. S. S. Is free of all minerals and con
tains Ingredients wonderfully conducive to
well balnnred health.
You can get It at any drug store, but do
not accept anything else. There is danger
In substitutes. S. S. S. Is prepared only by
The Swift Specific Co., 52S Swift Bldg.,
Atlanta. Ga Our Medical Dept, will give
you free instruction bv mall on any subject
of blood disorders. Write today.
Ruling Out Uncertainty.
Candidate—"Now. my friends, when
you vote, you don't want to vote for
a pig in a poke: you want to vote for
me—and get the genuine article!"
Wise Office Boy.
Chief Clerk—"If I am wanted I will
be with the manager.” Latest Ac
quisition—"Yis, sir An’ If you are not
wanted where will yer be?"
FOLEY
KIDNEY
PILLS
Note These
Points
Interesting to men and
women having Kidney
and Bladder troubles
That Foley Kidney Pills are suc
cessful everywhere with all kidney
and bladder troubles, backache,
weak back, rheumatism, stiff and
aching joints, because they are a
true medicine, honestly made, that
you cannot take into your system
without having 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 A LX DEALERS
Go to
Tvbee
rfll Offthe Georgia
® Coast, near
Savannah
“Where Ocean Breezes Blow.”
Low Ten Day, Week-End, Sunday and Season Fares.
Central of Georgia Railway
The Right Way. *
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RAILWAY CO.
CURRENT SCHEDULES.
Griffin
Chattanooga .
Ceciartowu . ..
Columbus . . .
ARRIVE FROM
,11:10a. m.
. 1:40 P. m.
. 6 :39 A. m.
. 9 :05 a M.
7:17 P. M.
6:36 p. M.
Griffin
Griffin
Chattanooga . ,
Cedartown . ..
Culumbua
DEPART FOR
1:40 P.M.
. 6:39 A. M.
.11:10 A. M.
. 7:17 P. M.
. . 7:40 A. m.
6:15 pm
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
GEORGIA—Coweta County:
Notice is hereby given to all creditors of the es
tate of Mary Lou Jackson, late of said 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 perwons indebted
to said estate are hereby requested to make imme
diate payment. This July 31. 1914- Prs. fee. $3.75.
T. J FISHER. Executor.
Give us a trial order on
job printing.
Petition to Remove Disabilities.
Mattie Hill / Libel for Divorce. Coweta Superi-
vs, -or Court. Verdict for total divorce.
Henry Hill. ' Petition to remove disabilities.
Notice is hereby given to all concerned that on
the 7th day of March, 1914, I filed with the Clerk
of the Superior Court of said county my petition,
addressed to said Court, returnable to the next
term thereof, to be held on the first Monday in
September, 1914, for the removal of disabilities
resting upon me under the verdict in the case of
Henry Hill against the petitioner, which applies-*
tion will be heard at the said September term.
1914, of said Court. MATTIE HILL.
If you owe for this paper pay up.