Newnan herald & advertiser. (Newnan, Ga.) 1909-1915, August 28, 1914, Image 5

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The Heraldland Advertiser “The Herald and Advertiser” office in upetaire In the Carpenter Building, 7Mi Greenville ntreet, ’ Phone 6. MOTHER OF SCHOOL GIRL Tell* How Lydia E. Pinkham’a Vegetable Compound Re stored Her Daugh ter's Health. Plover, Iowa. —“From a small child my 13 year old daughter had female weakness. I spoke to three doctors about it and they did not help her any. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com pound had been of great benefit to me, so I decided to have her give it a trial. She has taken five bottles of the Vege- J table Compound ac cording to directions on the bottle and the is cured of this trouble. She was all run down when she started taking the Compound and her periods did not come right. She was so poorly and weak that I often had to help her dress herself, but now she is regular and is growing strong and healthy.” — Mrs. Martin Helvig, Plover, Iowa. Hundreds of such letters expressing gratitude for the good Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound has accom plished are constantly being received, proving the reliability of this grand old remedy. If you are ill do not drag along and continue to suffer day in and day out but at once take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege table Compound, a woman’s remedy for woman’s ills. If you want special advice write io I.ydia E. l’inkham Medicine Co. (coufl- (Initial) Lynn, Mass. Your letter will he opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. Professional Cards. W. L. WOODROOF, PHYSICIAN ANDSURGEON. Office 11 Mi Greenville street Residence 9 Perry itreet. Office 'phone 401: residence 'phone 461. D. A. HANEY, PHYSICIAN ANDSURGEON. Offers his professional service to the people of Newnan, and will answer all callB town or coup- Office over First National Bank. THOS. J. JONES, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office on E. Broad street, near public square. Residence next door to Virginia House. T. B. DAVIS, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office—Sanitorium building. Office 'phone 6—1 call: residence 'phone 6—2 calls. W. A. TURNER, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Special attention given to surgery and diseases of women. Office 19 1 /.' Spring street. 'Phone 230 F. I. WELCH, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office No. 9 Temple avenue, opposite public school building. 'Phone 234. THOS. G. FARMER, JR., ATTORNEY AT LAW Will give careful and prompt attention to all /eKal busines entrusted to me. Money to loan Office in court-house. :a and West Point RAILROAD COMPANY ARRIVAL AND DEPARTURE OFTRAINS AT NEWNAN, GA. EFFECTIVE JAN. 19, 1914. r Subject to change and typographical errors. No. 35 7:25 a. m. No. 10 7:50 a. m. No IS ,.. 9:45 a. in. No 33 10:40 a. m. No, 39 3 :17 p. m. No 30 H :35 p. in . No M 5:37 p. m. No 42 . 0:43 a. in No 3“ 15 :40 a- in No 40 1:00 p. m. No. 17... 5:12 p. m. No. 41... 7 ;20 p. m. No. 37... ... 0:23 p. ni. No. 3d 10:23 p. in. All trains daily. Odd numbers, southbound; even numbers, north bound. War’s Compensations. Detroit Free Press. Despite all its horrors and terrors, there are compensations even in war. They are what distinguish it from hell, which has none. In time of real, heart-breaking war the portion of the human race involved gets to a rock bottom and lives among the fundamen tal realities. Class distinctions built up by great labor are brushed aside as matters of no moment unless they can be made utilitarian. Men and women mostly count for what they are. The gewgaws and pretty accomplishments of society are quoted at a very low figure in the market of public opinion. They become recognized as excrescen ces of life. A remorseless separation of the ■heep from the goats is almost sure to occur. War brings judgment. It is a great revealer of values. It holds up the foundations to the general gaze and teaches men and women facts absut their own natures of which they have never dreamed. Some people find out that they can do an astonishingly large number of things which had aforetime seemed impossible; that they can endure with patience privations which they would have considered over whelming if viewed in prospect. Others are shocked to discover how much of "good front” they have carefully con structed is sham and pretense. War divides those with courage and fortitude from the blusterers. Drifterr on the tide of life go down and are sub merged. Humanity is tried by fire and a great deal of the dross is eliminated. People learn to think less about their rights and privileges and more about their duties. They trouble less about their neighbors' morals and sins and mure about their own. War is an enemy to finespun distinc tions, but it does get life down to brass tacks. Court Calendar. COWETA CIRCUIT. « W. Freeman, Judge; J. Render Terrell, So li leitor-GeneraL |Aujju r Ht Vether ~~ Third MontJa J s in February and Ii.pV' ,weta —First Mondays in March andSeptem- Third Mondays in March and Septera iroH-Firm Mondays in April and October iroup—First Mondays in Fernuary and Aug CITY COURT OF NEWNAN. - A (tor. 1‘ost, Judge; W. L. Stallings. Bollc- term meets third Mondays in Janu- r >■ April, July and October. HA.NKRUFTCY COURT, freeman.Newnan,Ga..Referee in Bank- I.;,',' i ,r panties of Coweta. Troup, Heard. »wether. Carroll, Douglas and Haralson. Petition to Remove Disabilities. at»ie Hill \ Libel for Divorce. Coweta Superi- LA.,, . or Court. Verdict for total divorce. ’ Petition to remove disabilities. ’jv-e is hereby given to all concerned that on •th da y of March, 1914, I filed with the Clerk u b«n°r Court of said county my petition, ►m- ok **'d Court, returnable to the next Utvt*r!?wI e0 *,V to ** be,d on the first Monday in * or the removal of disabilities enrv*wJi? n under the vefldict in the coee ef er ’[ a £** n *t the petitioner, whieh applica- lli ^ th « said September term, r « said Court. MATTIE HILL. Tribute to Mother. Lord Macaulay. Children, look in those eyes, listen to that dear voice, notice the feeling of even a touch bestowed upon you by that hand. Make much of it while you have that most precious of ail gifts, a loving mother. Read the unfathomable love of their eyes; the anxiety of that tone and look, however slight your pain. In after life you may have friends, but never again will you have inexpressible love and gentleness lavished upon you, which none but a mother can bestow. Often do I sigh in the struggles with the hard, uncaring world for the sweet, deep security 1 felt when, of an evening, I listened to some quaint tale suitable to my age, read in an un tiring voice. Never can I forget her sweet glances cast upon me when I appeared asleep- even her kiss of peace at night. Years have passed away since we laid her be side my father in the old churchyard; yet still her voice whispers from the grave, and her eye3 watch over me, as I visit spots long since hallowed to the memory of my mother. Girls are troubled so. About their clothes, we mean. It is really a pity. Did you ever notice the fact that when ever a girl gets anything nice some other girl is sure to get something just like it? It is remarkable. We have studied the problem and can find no solution. Every girl is mad about it. None of them ever can get anything without someone else getting something like it. You never saw a girl who was not afflicted in the same way. And since all are aggrieved, it has always bothered us to know who were the aggressors But it must be so, for all the ladies make the same complaint. What is needed is a law prohibiting anyone of the female sex to wear anything like anybody else does. Let every girl get up something original, and let us have peace. There is too little said in the press of the State about the pistol-toter. While there is much said about the enforce ment of the prohibition law, there is scarcely anything about rounding up the bully who goes around with a con cealed pistol, trying to “start some thing.” It should receive more atten tion by the Legislature. Dogs and pis tols seem to "skeer” the law-makers more than all other matters. Some people seem to lose sight of every Georgia law but prohibition. It is just as unlawful to carry a pistol concealed as to sell a pint of liquor. The prohi bition law should be enforced, but there are other laws that should not te for gotten. What is known as the Russian Cos sacks are men who live in the southern part of Russia, who give up their time to military duty, instead of paying taxes. They are fierce fighters and furnish the empire with one of the strongest elements of its army. They do excellent work as scouts. They are liable to military service from the age of 18 to 50, and each man must furnish his own horse. 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. Ney Oldham, Wimberley, Texas, says: “Foley’s Ca thartic Tablets are the best laxative I ever us»d. They take the place of cal omel.” Wholesome, stirring and cleans ing. No griping. A comfort to stout persons. For sale by all dealers. Barbaric Preludes. New York World. Before a shot was fired in the pend ing struggle, war had inflicted incal culable losBeB upon neutrals as well as participants. Europe was reduced to savagery in an hour. Travelers en joying an old and seemingly well- established civilization one day, were panic-stricken refugees the next. Crldit, transportation, communication by telegraph, telephone or the mails, free press and free Bpeech, were in stantly destroyed or suspended. The wild stampede from the conti nent was more terrible in some of its as pects than the recent flight of for eigners from Mexico, and needlessly so. In Mexico there was fear of personal violence; yet, little was reported. In Europe, tourists whose presence is or dinarily welcomed were summarily left without resources. Demonstration and terror were not confined to the theater of war itself. They seized upon the finance and com merce of the whole world and paralyzed them. They reached three thousand miles across the Atlantic and inflicted losses of hundreds of millions upon the people of the United States, breaking up their markets, unsettling their credit and checking their industry. In the remotest parts of the earth where all is not barbaric these tragedies had their counterparts. Y’ears ago two nations might have war as they had epidemics, and it might last for years to nobody’s injury but their own. War now is a different thing. It slays and destroys peoples who have no part in it. Civilization wipes out national boundaries. War banishes civilization and progress, and the humanity and good faith that at tach to them. To appreciate the crime of war we do not have to await the rolls of the dead or the lists of cities devastated or fleets destroyed. The mere blood-guil tiness of it may be the smallest part of what has become an unpardonable of fense against mankind. —— ■ ' ' ■ A Word to the Farmers. Macon News. The conditions caused by the Euro pean war make it all the more sensible and even imperative for the farmers of Georgia to raise winter crops. There are several important food sup ply crops that they can raise, and there is no reason why they should not culti vate plenty of forage for their live stock. The farmer with barns full of corn, plenty of swine, a sugar cane patch, a pea field and a barnyard can turn up his nose at the high cost of living. The farmers should heed the advice of the agricultural demonstrators, now active throughout the State, who are urging them to develop winter crops. And, no doubt, many of them will. Georgia soil and Georgia climate are especially adapted to winter crops, and it should not he said that Georgia far mers are lacking in thrift, energy and precaution, the other prerequisites nec essary for the making of double crops every year. The farmers should knew, if they do not already, that all the money in farm ing for the next year or so will be in foodstuffs and not in textiles. Go a lit tle slow on your cotton for a while and give more time to your corn, wheat and vegetables and to the calveB and pigs. An eminent Methodist bishop was ad vocating a more liberal loosing of the purse-strings, and during a sermon one day told his congregation that at one time he sent an article to a paper in which he said: “We pray too loud and work too little.” The intelligent compositor did a most satisfactory job, and when it appeared it read: “We bray too loud and work too lit tle. ’ ’ “I let it go at that,” said the bishop. “The fact is, I believe the printer was right, and I never ventured to correct him.” Get a right view of the highest end of marriage. Fix it in your mind that by God’s law and by your marriage vow you are bound to each other, until death shall you part. Your wife, O man, is not merely to mend your clothes, cook your victuals, keep your house, rear your children. Your hus band, O woman, iB not merely to give you protection, furnish a home, give support, or indulge your tastcH. You are of one twain, made one that you may be one. No matter in. what else you may economize, there 19 a criminal folly in economizing on beds. Every person needs his own bed more than he needs his own chair or his own plate at the table. And the best in the world is a bed of fresh straw covered with plenty of quilts. No child should be allowed to sleep on fresh feathers or animal re fuse of any kind. But to sleep two in a bed is a vital danger. One is sure to absorb the electric energy of the other. Many men spend more money on ex pensive caskets, flowers, and emblems of mourning than they ever spent on their poor, loving, self-sacrificing mothers for many years while alive. Men who never thought of carrying flowers to their mother in life, pile them high on their coffins. Piles (ured in 6 to 14 Days Your drugfiet will refund money if PAZO OINTMENT fail* to cure any case of Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles in 6 to 14 days. Xbc first application fives Ease and Rest. 60c. Go Slow. Albany Herald. The Government is going to do all that it can legitimately do to aid the Southern people to take care of the situation that has been inqiosed upon them by the paralyzing effects of the European war upon the cotton market. There is also manifest a disposition on the part of the banks of the country to pursue a liberal, indulgent policy. What with the amount of funds al ready in their vaults, the liberal deposits promised to national banks in the in terior by the Federal Treasury, and the ample provision being made under the new hanking and currency law for the issuance of emergency currency, the supply of money is going to he ample for all legitimate demands. This is one of the encouraging features of the sit uation. There will bo no money panic, and those who are in position to offer reasonable security will have no trouble in getting what money they may ac tually need to keep business going. Under these conditions one of the greatest dangers we seu is that too many men will be tempted to borrow more money than their actual necessi ties require, and it is against this over borrowing that we would now warn our people, particularly the farmers who may propose to put up cotton for se curity. Cotton receipts arc going to be a good basis of credit or collateral just as they have always been, but the termer should hold out just as much of his crop as possible as a safeguard against any contingency or emergency which may arise whereby an enforced liquidation may result in great sacrifice. The more cotton that can be held out of the market in the present crisis the better for the grower, and the less debt the man with cotton incurs the less liable will he be to he caught in a squeeze. The situation is liable to offer great inducements to speculation before the cotton crop is finally marketed, and the prudent farmer should go slow about putting all his cotton in hock. The best policy for all in this emergency is to borrow as little as possible. No honest farmer who has sufficient cotton to meet his maturing obligations—debts that have already been incurred in good faith—should re fuse to promptly put it up as a basis of security with which to enable his ban ker or supply roerchnnt to, in turn, make good with his creditors and there by procure that extension of time or renewal of notes which is contemplated in the general plan which is advised by those who are trying to bring about co operation for the good of all, hut the farmer or any business man who bor rows simply because money may be available on easy terms will he making a great mistake. A day of liquidation and a time for realizing on securities will come as surely as death and taxes. Disturbed Old Lady—“1 am feeling very ill, doctor. Do you think I am go ing to die?” Comforting Doctor--“Compose your self, madam. That is the very laBt thing in the world that is going to hap pen to you.” If there is any dog in a man. it iB pretty apt to growl when his food si not to his taste. Undertakers are men who follow the medical profession. Only One “BROMO QUININE” To set the genuine, cell for full neme, LAXA. TIVE BROMO QUININE. Look lot denature of B. W. OROVB. Curea a Cold in One Day. Slopa cough and headache, and work* of! cold. 25c. "My Mamma Says - Its Safe for Children” CONTAINS NO OPIATES For Sale By ALL DEALERS Citation to Heirs-at-Law. T. F. Rawls, administrator of | Bill for direction, W. O. McCombs, deceased, | etc., in Coweta vs. 1 Superior Court, Mrs. Mattie Heavers, I Sept, term, Mrs. Frances IO. Cutler, et. al. I 1914. To Mrs. Muttie Heavers, Mrs. Frances E. Cutler, Mrs. Annie Meachum, Mrs. la. A. Huggins, John II. Walston, Y. B. Walston, W. D. Walston, Jesse Adams, Mrs. Sarah Walker Salado, Carrie H. Wall, Mrs, M. A. Chandler. J. B. Hrooks. Mrs. Anna Carroll, Mrs, Millie Youngblood, Mrs. Joe Fry or, Mrs. Lucinda Barron. Mrs. Sue Dunn. MrH. Ella Griffiths. Mrs. Nancy Dalton, Mrs. Alice T. Holland, Mrs. T. S. Hall, Mrs. A nice K. Taylor, Mrs. A. A. Moore, Mrs. B. V. Moore, Mrs. Ida Jeffery, Mrs. Eliza Smith, and all of the heirs at law of W. O. McCombs, lute of Coweta county. Ga., deceased: You and »?uch of you are hereby commanded and required, personally or by attorney, to he and ap pear at the next term of said Superior Court of said Coweta county. Ga., to be held in and for said county, ut the City of Newnan, Georgia, on the first Monduy in September, at 10 o'clock a. m.. then ami there to answer the complaint in said action, being a hill for direction, etc. As in de fault of such presence naid court will proceed thereon as to justice may appertain. Witness the Honorable R. W. Freeman. Judge of said Court, this the 9th day of June. 1914. L. TURNER. Clerk Superior Court of Coweta county. Ga. SPECIAL TO WOMEN Thu most economical, cleansing and germicidal of ail antiseptics ia A soluble Antiseptic Powder to be dissolved in water as needed. As a medicinal antiseptic for douches in treating catarrh, inflammation or ulceration of nose, throat, and that caused by feminine ills it has no equal. For ten years the Lydia JO. Plnkhaia Medicine Co. ha* recommended Paxtine in their private correspondence with women, which proves its superiority. Women who have been cured say It is “worth itk weight In gold.” At druggists. 50c. large box, or by mall. The PaxtoR Toilet Co„ Do*ton, gas*. For that hot, “stuffy,” “sticky,” “no-count” feeling — Cools—Refreshes -- Stimulates A delightful flavor all its own In Iced Bottles Anywhere 5c ALWAYS LOOK FOR THE LABEL BOTTLED BY CHERO-COLA BOTTLING CO. Sew nan Ga. Ready for To-morrow ? Horses digest their feed less thoroughly than Other farm animals. In order to insure thorough digestion of all the food eaten, and to make your horses readier for next day’s work, add to their evening teed a teaspoonful of— Ree stock DCC^CC MEDICINE It will lessen your feed bills. It will Increase your profits. I .nn using BceDte STOCK MKDICINKwith my horact, regularly and lind it n Having proposition ■in Ici'd. II also make* Hu in healthy, thriving and clean. Ira Johnston, R. F. D. No. t, O’Neill, Nebr. 25c, 50c and $1. per can. At your dealer's. P. B, I Go to ' / \J - • v Tybee a. -• ?■ Off the Georgia Coast, near Savannah “Where Ocean Breezes Blow.” Low Ten Day, Week-End, Sunday and Season Fares. Central of Georgia Railway The Right Way. - • Notice to Debtors and Creditors. GEORGIA—Coweta CoUmty: Notice la 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 demand* to the undorsigned within the time pnescribed by law. properly made out; and all persona indebted to said estate are hereby requested to make imme diate payment. This July 31. 1914. Pro. fee, $3.75* T. J FISHER, Executor. AH kinds of job work done with neatness and dispatch at this office. j teuflHSiaM