Newnan herald & advertiser. (Newnan, Ga.) 1909-1915, September 18, 1914, Image 10

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1 This R is for You! —, i£ V .. C£V_ m Hot flashes or dizziness, fainting It You Sutter from spe|lgi hysteria, headache, bear ing down pains, nervousness—all are symptoms of irregularity and female disturbances and are not beyond relief. __ Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is directed to the real cause and promptly removes the disease, ■uppresseH the pains and nervous symptoms and thereby brings comfort in the place of prolonged misery. It has been sold by druggists for over 40 years, in fluid form, at $1.00 per bottle, giving g&ner&l satisfaction. Jt can now be had in l ugar coated tablet form, »tt modified by It. V. Pierce, M. IJ. b>-ld by all medicine dealers or trial box by mail on receipt of 50c in stamps. Every sick woman may consult in ly lotU-r, absolutely without charge. Write without fear os without fee, 1o Faculty of the Invalids’ Hotel, Dr. V. M. IMEUCJfc, President, W>i Main Street. Buffalo. No*** York [ DR, prntCF’S PI.F.ASANT PELLFTS REGULATE THE UVEtt i The Herald and Advertiser 1 NEWNAN, FRIDAY. SEPT. IK 1 A SE PT F. M B H li S ON ti. The golden-rfid inn glowing ember The lister flumeM by the coppice path • And over the meiwlHof brown September I'ioMts tho breath of the aftermath. < %n you recall." any the vnunor thriiHhop. Coined for ttie Might to the far-away, Tryi»t« in the tender twilight hushe*. Under the faint new moon of May"" Can you recall the liountoouH guerdon (All. the wealth of itw promising") Ami we, we echo the poignant burden, "Where, oh where, is our vaniuhed spring?" Vanished? Nay!" said the fair Earth Mother, ' Though autumn sever and winter part. With winds that nting and with snows that smother. The spring nhides in tho constant heart." European Conflict and Unique Position of Southern States. Edgar Rydenstrlckcr, Chief Bureau of Applied Economics, Washington, 1). C. Out of tho columns of comment on tho effect of tho European conflict on tho South that have appeared during tho past month, several basic facts are prominent. First, the Smith is harder hit by tho war than other sections of the country. Second, this is due to the South’s unique position in the industry of the country. Third, whatever permanent advan tage the South may gain from the commercial readjustments that the wur will demand, it will be in the use of the South’s peculiar opportunity due to its unique position. It is not necessary to quote familiar statistics to set forth the character of the South’s industries. A single par agraph will serve to sum up the posi tion. With the exception of fruit and truck products in certain parts of the South, it is not a food-producing section. In no sense does it produce a surplus of staple foodstuffs. In fnct, it does not even supply enough foodstuffs for the consumption of its own cities anti towns. On the other hand, its main surplus products are raw materials for manufacture, the greater portion of which go out of the South for con sumption. Of the thirteen million halos of cotton the South produces an nually but 20 per cent, is consumed by Southern mills. Another 20 per cent. iH consumed by Northern mills. The remaining 60 per cent, is consumed by other countries. Again, a very considerable propor tion of the newer capita! invested in developing electrical power and cotton and tobacco mnnufacturing has been coining from France, Germany and Great Britain. The European conflict has shut this source of capital out for years to come, perhaps permanently. Furthermore, the South relies on Northern States for another consider able portion of its now capital for de velopment purposes. Thus, the South's industrial position, in spite of its re markable progress during the last ten or fifteen years, is a dependent one. It is not surprising, therefore, that an event of so gigantic industrial and commercial importance to the world as a'war involving practically all of Europe should be of serious immediate effect on n non-food-producing, non- manufacturing, but raw material pro ducing country. When nations go to war, their needs suddenly change. Kv the call of men and masters to the battlefield and by the withdrawal of capital to supply the sinews of struggle, their manufacturers are hampered and their agriculture halted. Especially is this true of the present conflict. The suddenness of its happening, the rap idity of attack and the strain of de fense. have permitted no gradual ad justment of producing factors. The result is already in a short six weeks clearly evident. The demand from the theatre of war for raw ma terial has almost vanished and the need for food supplies is becoming more and more insistent. This result will be in tensified as the war continues. F.ven when peace comes the first efforts of the exhausted nations, so history has taught us. will be to provide for their own ravaged fields a food supply, and later, as their power of purchase is revived, they will need manufactured articles. Raw material will be needed in large quantities again only after a fairly complete recovery. In the mean time other countries, deprived of tneir sources of food and manufactured sup plies, will call upon the United States for goods that Europe, particularly Germany and France, were in the habit of furnishing. This change in the world’s demand for goods has already been thoroughly understood. Even with the declaration of war, the keen business sense of America foresaw the opportunity and the need of meeting it, and grasped it. The Southern business man’s job is harder than the task of the othpr busi ness men of other sections because of the peculiar industrial situation in the South. The wise currency provision of the Federal Government and the co-opera tion of bankers and business men will doubtless take care of the planters whose crops are now in cotton warehouses and barns, and of the business men who have financed the planters. But what of next year, and 1916? What prac ticable methods can ha devised — To prevent the value of the stored raw material from deteriorating through the adding of another year's supply? To consume an appreciably greater proportion of the raw material in the South’s own factories and enter into new fields of commerce that the war has opened up? To utilize our plantations and farms for the immediate needs of the nations at war? Four weeks after the conflict began a prominent Atlanta tanker, who is noted for his conservative habit of ex pression, said: “From being normally hard up, the Southern cotton planter is now facing the stark specter of bank ruptcy.” That is literally, entirely true. It is true of the tobacco planter as well, and of thousands of merchants who have financed the planters, anil who must finance them to a great extent next year. No makeshift or temporary expedient will suffice. “Buy a hale of cotton" campaigns will not cure the trouble. Currency issued on the basis of cotton will not alleviate the situation if cotton is again piled lip in the ware houses and barns in 1915 and 1911). Ap peals to the Federal Government to hoy the stored raw material are little more than a confession of unwillingness to undertake the fundamental readjust ments that alone will take care of the future as well as the immediate situ ation. The unique position, of the South de mands that the temporary readjust ments must be in the direction of the the greatest possible future develop ment. In other words, no expedient will be of benefit unless it removes the real point of weakness in the industrial situation in which the South has been placed, and in which it has now dis covered itself. Fortunately, there is machinery to accomplish these permanent readjust ments without delay. The business men of the South in the past decade have perfected organization in every city capable of efficient co-operative work. The planters and farmers, through a strong union, have proven that they can act collectively. The South has learned bettter tliun other sections how to work with Federal agri cultural betterment agencies. The task of crop diversification and food produc tion, of fitting factories to new de mands, and extending Southern trade in South America and the Occident, are not only ripe fpr undertaking, but the machinery to push them is here. The situation is only discouraging as long as it is permitted to remain un changed. An old worthy who was in the habit of calling each evening at the village inn for a "drap o’ the best," found the lai dlord one night putting a shine on the taps. After a few remarks about the weather he received his nightly dram. When ho had gone the landlord discovered to his horror that he had supplied Donald with a half-gill out of the bottle of sulphuric acid he had been using for cleaning the taps. Every moment In 1 expected to hear of Don ald’s death, and his relief was great when the old worthy arrived next even ing. “Donald, what did you think o’ the whiskey ye got last night?” “It was a fine dram, a good warming dram, hut it had one fault—every time 1 coughed it set fire to my whiskers.” How To aivs Quinine To Children. FFPKII.INH is the trade-mark nam? to an improved Uuiniuc. It is a Tasrelet*:* Syrup, ple*!i- lo ami dors not disturb the stomach. Children take it amt never know it la Quinine. Also especially adapted to adults who cannot take ordinary Quinine. Dors got nauseate nor cause nervousness nor ringing in the head. Try It the treat lime you need Quinine for any pur* Ask for .’ ounce original packagre. The name PbBRlLIKK is blown ta bottle. 25 cents. Obituary. “Truly, death loves a shining mark — a signal blow. ” On Thursday morning, Aug. 20, just as another day was beginning its course, Mrs. Frances Doran’s spirit left its car nal body and was transported to regions beyond the sky. She was born April 19, I860. In early childhood she devel oped a God-like, Christian character, and joined the church in her girlhood. Always a lovely and dutiful woman, her life adorned her profession of Christian ity, and her days were spent in the ser vice of her Master. In January, 1875, she was united in marriage to Jas. Doran. Although her married life was short, it was a beauti ful, happy one. To this union were born two children, one dying in infancy and the other, Mrs. Mary Danders, liv ing to be the cheer and comfort of her mother iu her last illness. One of Mrs. Doran’s most notable characteristics was her devotion to her four young brothers. Their mother and father dying when they were very young, she became father, mother and sister to them. Never too weary, she was always ready to minister to their many childish wants. While the home wants were ever on her heart, she vis ited the sick and the aged, carrying kindness and sunshine wherever she wpnt. No matter how bad the weather, how dreary the day, when she heard of anyone in trouble and sorrow her smil ing face and willing hands were the first to be there. O, how the communi ty will miss her gentle footsteps and cheery voice! For fifteen years Mrs. Doran had been a constant sufferer, yet one sel dom heard her complain. In her last illness almost her constant thought was of heaven. She talked of heaven, not as a far-distant land to be dreaded, but as a “beautiful city just over the way, ” where there is no more pain or suffer ing. She now has a place in the happy throng around the “groat white throne,’’ and her voice is blending with those singing at the Master’s feet. We know that if we follow in the path she trod we will all meet and be reunited in that land where there’3 no more sorrow. Mrs. Doran leaves to mourn her death one daughter, Mrs. Alf Landers; five grandchildren, Eula, Plyinnn, Edna, Bill and Johnnie Landers; two brothers, R. E. J. and R. N. Winkles. A Friend. McCollum, Ga., Sept. 10, 1914. Chamberlain’s Liniment. If you are ever troubled with aches, pains or soreness of the muscles, you will appreciate the good qualities of Chamberlain’s Liniment. Many suf ferers from rheumatism and sciatica have used it with the best results. It is especially valuable for lumbago and lame back. For sale by all dealers. Must Now Be Done. Athens Banner. The Government has given millions of acres of land to the railroads, it has built the Panama canal in order that America's commerce might be extend ed, it has rushed millions to the relief of stranded Americans in Europe, it spends hundreds of millions of dollars on rivers and hirbors —in fact, it puts up its money and credit wherever it can help the people. Here is a situation in which one-third of the people of the country are vitally interested. The Southern farmers are not responsible for the situation. They are simply caught in the net by the big war. Tney are trapped just as effectively as were the stranded Amer icans in Europe, only their situation is more desperate and on a larger scale. They do not ask money to be given ! them. All they are asking is for their i Government to step into the breach for I a few months with its money and its | credit. Every dollar put out in this j way will be made safe, every dollar re- j turned to the Government. There is 1 no risk, but it means mucli not only to | the farmers, but to millions in this I country—not only in the South, but in all parts of the country. Whatevsr is to be done must be done I at once. The time for talking is past;) the time for action is at hand. Just four days before the late primary “specials" sent all over Georgia in formed farmers that, in a few days more, arrangements would be perfected by which the Government would pro- j tect the farmer, holding his cotton fori 12 cents; but this all died out the day after the primary election. Diarrhoea Quickly Cured. “My attention was first, called to Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Di arrhoea Remedy as much as twelve years ago. At that time I was seri ously ill with summer complaint. One dose of this remedy checked the trou- ffie,” writes Mrs. C. W. Florence, Rockfield, Ind. For sale by all dealers. No matter how smart and intelligent your little boy is, he is sure to drive you mad some evening with the follow ing sort of thing: “Papa!” “Well, what on earth do you want now?” "Papa, didn't Adam have more than one name?” “Of course he didn’t have more than one name. Now please don’t bother me any more—I’m reading. One more silly question and you’ll go to bed. Do you understand that?” “Yes, o'course. But can’t I ask you something about the same question?” "Y es, what is it?” “Was Adam his first name or his last name?” Obituary. On Friday afternoon, Aug. 7, the Grim Reaper came and touched all that was mortal of little Annie Bell Lee. Only twelve years ago she came to live among us, and in that short span she wove a beautiful character of strength and love. Her life was short, but it «as long enough to strengthen bands of love that will endure through all eternity. In her bright face, gen tle manner and sweet eyes there was written god’s own autograph—“1 am my Lord's, and He is mine.” It is a bit of heaven’s philosophy that "whom the gods love die young.” Our Savior suffered not the infirmities of age; so this young girl is spared all the vicissitudes and sorrows of a later life. The poor little girl suffered for nine long months before the Angel of Death bore her to a clime far more beautiful than this. Our Heavenly Father called her from this world, and now she is roaming with God’s children in fields elysian. She was too pure and sweet for this world, and we know that she is now an angel, robed in spotless white. A Friend. McCollum, Ga., Sept. 10, 1914. It takes the better worst side of a man. half to see the MUST BELIEVE IT When Well-Known Newnan People Tell It So Plainly. When public indorsement is made by a representative citizen of Newnan the proof is positive. You must believe it. Read this testimony. Every suf ferer of kidney backache, every mn», woman or child with kidney trouble, will do well to read the following: Mrs. J. T. Holmes. 20 Fair St., New nan, Ga., says; "My back ached ter ribly and I was bothered by dizzy spelki and a kidney weakness. I was treated at a mineral spring and tried several kidney remedies, but I was not helped until I procured Doan’s Kidney Pills from the Lee Drug Co. They did such good work that I advise other kidney sufferers to try them. I have not had need of a kidney remedy sinee and I am glad to confirm my former indorsement of Doan’s Kidney Pills.” Price 50c. at all dealers. Don’t sim ply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that U» Holmes had. Foster-Milbarn Ce., Props., Buffalo, N. Y. It was a Broadway car. A passenger stooped and picked up a coin from the floor. Three of the other passengers eyed him with envy. He said; "Which of you people dropped a $5 gold piece?" “I did," yelled each of the three. “Well,” said the finder to the man nearest him, "here’s a nickel of it.” HUSBAND RESCUED DESPAIRING WIFE \fter Four Years of Discouraging 11 had R° tten so weak 1 could not stand - and I gave up in despair. Conditions, Mrs. Bullock Gave At Iast| mv hu5band got me a bottlc of Up in Despair. Husband Cardui, the woman's Ionic, and 1 com- _ n menced taking if. From the very first Came to Kescue. dose, i could tell it was helping me. I can now walk two miles without its tiring me, and am doing all my work.” If you are all run down from womanly Catron, Ky—In an interesting letter from this place, Mrs. Bettie Bullock writes as follows: “1 suffered for four troubles, don t give up in despair. Try years, with womanly troubles, and during this time, I could only sit up for a little while, and could not walk anywhere at Cardui, the woman’s tonic. It has helped more than a million women, in its 50 years of continuous success, and should all. At times, I would have severe pains surely hrfip you, too. Your druggist has in my left side. Write to: Ch*tt*tvv>£a Medfdne Co., Ladles' Advivtxy Dept.. Chattanoo**. Tenn., for Special Instruction* on yo«r case j c l 64 - page book, * Homo TrraLBient for Women." rent ia aUin wraooor. !-4a WE ONLY ASK YOU TO s COMPARE THIS Choose An Oil | Heater Wisely| Lot us help you—for oil heat-1 c*is art* different—some are better I than others. The one sure best® _ . _ _ __ l'-r 20 years—the one that produces the I D ADI F D HfATFf? l Tost'heut lor the least coat, is the one ■ I L_I\ ”’ith this trade-mark. Meats n cold ■ r *o»n in a ‘jiffy"—to the remotest cor-1 non. The heat is clean nnd odorless. K Costs only one cent an hour, O with others and we will leave the result with vou. Depend on that J f] name f.-r lasting: .satis- H faction. Y-ut can only I Ret genuine HAULER ■ Ideal Heaters in this town of us. So come in, first chance vou Ret, n a"d examine one critically. Vmi will H Md he urged to buy—it must tv!I itself. m | but come in sootl, • JOHNSON HARDWARE CO. TELEPHONE 81, NEWNAN, GA. In Our New Quarters We are now established in our new quarters on the corner of Jefferson and Madison streets, and extend a cordial invitation to our friends to drop in and see us. We are beginning now to replenish our stocks in preparation for the fall trade, and shall be “ready with the goods’’ to supply ev erything in our line that may be needed. We advise our friends to keep cool and not get demoralized on account of the war in Eu rope. Ours is a great Government, and will provide means to take care of the South’s cotton crop. Be of good cheer. Everything will turn out right in the end. I. G. & sold Cardui for years. He knows what The doctor was called in, and his treat-i‘I will do. Ask him. He will recom ment relieved me for a while, but I was j ™ nd «*• Be 6 in takjn S Cardui today soon confined to my bed again. After that, nothing seemed to do me any good. 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