Newnan herald & advertiser. (Newnan, Ga.) 1909-1915, October 09, 1914, Image 8

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Boils Biliousness Malaria Constipation Are You Troubled? Dr. Pierces Golden Medical Discovery Perhaps this case may be similar to years J. Wen try Tilly of (flax R73.) Selma, Cal., icrttcn: Gontlcrm*n:—'*lt frivea m* much pleasure to he able to pr*nd you a twllmoniul, if by iui nurhirnr ubio pufferor your medicines will dona much Tor him an th«*y I,VO for me. At the men of fourto<-n I wan troubled ii Kreut tlr«l wit h malar Unml htliousn" accomptini»<J with the worn wort of Inrim l»oih. I wan persuaded by rny parents, who have always l»een strnmr believers In Dr. IMorcr'a ronvdies. to try the Golden Medical Discovery. I took one pottle anuthe boils all dis appeared, bill I did not atop atom* Ivittlr, I took three nnd the malaria all left me and I hir • l ad no more boils to this day, thinks to the 'Golden Medieul Discovery' for my relief. "Following nn operation for «pr»°ndlriti* two year* ago I wad troiilil'"! vi-rv rieirh with roastbwti. ( u and I hnvi* tr>tnvr Mr. I'i<*rr» r s IM»rui<uit. I'lirauttve IVIh-u un«J they hnvu riel tin* of tlio trt»ut»li*H«iir»e (ran and Iiuvp nnjod m** in ronnier- ifiK tlio w hole ttoilltle; ttiiiiil. i on for tin* * I*• Hot»' urn) f r tho Nitviee I Iimv<* oliLamml from Tin* I*»*0|iM»*’* ( ornrnon Her.vt M< illralAtlvinur." Send only 81 rentsfor thi* 1008 pace hook. for over forty yours has boon lending its aid to just such cases as this. In our possession we have thou sands of testimonials of like character. Perhaps yon are skeptical, hut isn’t it worth ut. least a trial in vi -w of such Btrong testimony? Isn’t it reason able to suppose that if it has done so much for others it can do as much for you ? Yotir druffjrht wilt supply you in liquid or tablet form, or you nan send GO one-esnt Btamps for a trial box. Address Dr. V. JI. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. The Herald and Advertiser NEWNAN, FRIDAY, OCT. !» HUY A B A 1. B . If you rule n "man of mcnns"- Buy a bain; If you've fifty in your j»*an * Huy n bale; If ygu’ve I'ufiirnd out you’re broke. 1'iit your diamond stud in aoak This emergency's no juke Huy a lisle. If you’re working for the South Huy h huh*. Lot your rush Hpnak. not your mouth — Huy a bale. Huck up. brother, all ain’t lost. This yero river nan bo eroused; Don’t ret acairt hIkmiI the coat Huy a hale. Keep King Cot ton on his throne Huy a bale. Since the Dove of Peace baa down Huy a bale. Lot the Old World have her war. When her freo-fnr-nll ia o'er She'll noed cotton more and more Huy h hale. Lot the wildcat atock-Hchomea rest Huy a hula. When you’ve fifty to invetit- Huy h bale. You will help nlnni? your biz, fDoean’t matter what it |a.) And your neirhbor will help his Huy a hale. Now'h the time to lilt the ball — Huy a hale. Help the farmer out thin fall Buy a bale. You'll he proud you did your nliare When the cash that you ran apsre FJaMena out fhb* rot ton aruro Huy a hale. | Meigs (). Froat in (Jalvoaton News. DEMAND FOR COTTON GOODS Will Steadily Increase, Says Promi nent Sonthern Financier. Before the National Association of Cotton Manufacturers at Lenox, Mass., last week W. I’. (!. Harding, member of the Federal Reserve Board and stu dent of present economic conditions in the South, predicted that within the next few months there will be a stead ily increasing demand for cotton goods by consumers, and a consequent de mand for raw cotton both by the mills and for export. Mr. Harding said: “I shall riol undertake to hazard any guesses as to the probable consumption of cotton within the next few months, hut 1 will he hold enough to predict that as the season progresses there will he a steadily increasing demand for rot- ion goods by tile consumers, with a cor responding demand for raw cotton by tho mills, and witli a marked increase in the demand for export. "Of course,” lie continued “as long as present conditions continue the de mand from Germany, Austria-Hungary, Belgium and France will be greatly cur tailed, but. there should be u good de mand from Great Britain, Spain, Italy and from Russia, which can obtain its supplies independently of routings through the Baltic Sea. Ship-room is now available, prompt action by Con gress has enabled our Government to provide marine insurance, the Bank of England is again discounting hills, and practically ail the obstacles in the way of exports to all foreign countries, ex cept Germany and Austria-Hungary, have been removed. Foreign exchango conditions have within the last few days been vastly improved by the formation of the gold fund, ns approved by the Secretary of the Treasury and the Fed eral Reserve Board, and as our exports of grain nnd cotton increase in volume, ns they must do in the very near fu ture, normal quotations for sterling hills will again prevail. "Cotton goods are the cheapest of nil textiles, and should replace during hard times tiner Rnd more expensive fabrics. Cotton can tie used in considerable quan tities as a substitute for jute and othe- materials in the manufacture of burlaps and sacks. Mills in Knglaml are re ported as running double time on khaki for army uniforms, and there is no rea son to doubt that the trade will ulti mately absorb the world’s production. Cotton manufacturers must solve the problems which have grown out of the closing of the cotton exchanges of this conn ry, whereby they have been de prived of a standardized price and of their power to hedge on contracts, and must overcome the further difficulty, occasioned by loss of confidence and curtailment of credits, of financing pur chases. Compared with the prices that have obtained for the past three or four seasons present quotutiohs seem very low, hut it is doubtful if large stocks of cotton could be secured at prevailing prices, as an active buying movement would undoubtedly enhance Values. "It is argued that the Southern States have produced a cotton crop which, add ed to that grown in other countries, is under present conditions about 5,000,000 hales greater than is required for the world’s needs, and the fear that this is true is causing much apprehension in the South. There have been predictions of general bankruptcy. "The cause is not hard to find. For many years the South has been gaining in wealth and its farmers have been growing more independent, better methods of agriculture have been in troduced, marked progress has been made in the diversification of crops, large plantations have been sub-divided into small farms, and in many cases the tenant farpier has become his own landlord. There ia in every normal year a certain proportion of the crop which comes in early and which seeks the market at any level that it can find, which is commonly called ‘distressed cotton. ’ This is the cotton that is now being sold at seven and a half to eight cents, and it would be well for manu facturers to bear in mind that at these figures much cotton will be withheld from the market for months to come. "It is true that there is a great amount of indebtedness which can be liquidated only by the sale of cotton, but in view of the increased coft of production in recent years, sales at present prices would be in many cases inadequate for the discharge of these obligations, so that even if the producer, being unable to sell his cotton for enough to pay his indebtedness, should turn it over to his creditor, many of these creditors would be in position to hold, and much of the cotton will be withheld from the actual market. "The financing of the present crop began with its planting laHt March or April. It is the one crop in the South on which loans ore always freely made until it is harvested, and investigations recently made by chambers of com merce in Southern States show that ad vances on cotton in different States, made from the time of the planting of the crop until it left the gins, range from $50 to $44 per bale. The last four crops, including seed, have brought the people of the Southern States a gross average of nearly one thousand million dollars per year, of which amount about one-half has come from domestic and Canadian mills, and the remainder rep resents the vuluu of exports to foreign countries. “By the sale of this crop the South has been able to not only discharge its obligations promptly every fall, but has added half a billion dollars each year to the national trade balance. Cotton production is stimulated by high prices, nnd conversely it is curtailed when prices fall below the cost of pro duction. This has been particularly true in those years when prices were low throughout the season and contin ued low during planting time in the early spring. Never have tile evils of over-production been so universally ap preciated in the South as now, nor ever before has there been such grim deter mination to hold cotton and to radically curtail acreage. Public sentiment in many Southern States has been so aroused that there is now a general clamor for legislation by the States to regulate the production of cotton, and some farmers have gone so far as to demand that the planting of any cotton whatever in 15*15 be prohibited. "Of course, extreme action of this kind is not anticipated, but it is un doubtedly true that should prices con siderably below the average cost of production (which is probably about 10 cents per pound) prevail for the next six months, cotton will be parted with only us necessity arises, and most seri ous curtailment in acreage for the next crop will be the inevitable sequence. Many of those who might be financially able to put their lands in cotton would be attracted by the high prices for grain and would plant food crops, while oth ers less independent might be willing to continue in cotton but would find themselves unalil ■ to secure the neces sary advances. What Would You Do ? There are many times when on* man questions another's actions and | motives. Men act differently un der different circumstances The ques tion is. what would you do right now if you had a severe cold? Could you do better ilian to take Chamberlain's Cough Remedy? It is highly recom mended by people who have used it for years nnd know its value. Mrs. O. Ii. Sargent, Peru, lnd., says. "Chamber lain's Cough Remedy is worth its weight in gold and 1 take pleasure ill recommencing it.” For sale by all dealers. "No well-informed man on Southern conditions will deny that further diver sification in Southern farming is desira ble, and that more attention should be paid to cattle-raising and to the pro duction of foodstuffs. But it would be most unfortunate if by any chance the production of cotton next year should be so small as to make the trade de pendent upon the present crop for the greater portion of its two years’ sup ply. Cotton goods can compete with more expensive fabrics only up to a certain price level, and if a year hence the prevailing prices for raw cotton should be as abnormally high as they are now low, the manufacturers of cot ton goods will have their present prob lems aggravated, and would be fatally handicapped in a movement for trade expansion at the very time when it is probable that conditions would be ripe for efforts in that direction." In conclusion he said: "The tremendous waste incident to war will, of course, be felt all over the world, and losses will inevitably ensue; but there is no reason, so far as this country is concerned, why these losses should not be so uniformly dis tributed that they will not fall with crushing force upon any section, or upon any industry, and I firmly believe that American pluck and American en ergy are going to reassert themselves, and that American farmers, bankers, merchants and manufacturers will co operate with their Government and with each other in solving present prob lems, and that they will put themselves in a position to grasp the opportunities that the future is bound to offer.” He Has Seen Worse Days. Statesboro News. The cry of hard times in this country is a faDe cry. In a land that ia liter ally flowing with milk and honey, as it were, we hear people talking about hard times and not being able to pay their debts, etc. Why, we have seen the time when the people had nothing to sell— the time when the little wads of cotton that had been made was selling at 3 cents, and to-day every bale of cotton now on the market is finding a ready sale at 7A cents. The crop is good, and so is every other crop. The corn crop is good, the peas are fine. The best hay crop ever known has been *'ar- vested, and in good shape, too. Sweet potatoes were never better in the his tory of this country. Sugar cans is doing fine, and tin* crop of long sweet ening is going to be the best we have ever had. The pinders and other food crops are good. The cattle are sleek and f.it on the hills of Bulloch, and there are lots of hogs to fatten and lots of stuff to fatten them on. Beef and other meats are selling high. The far mer never saw a day when things were better for him. Eggs and chickens and country butter are bringing fancy prices, and yet we hear the folks talk ing about hard times. Why, there ought to be a severe penalty imposed on the next calamity squmvler that at tempts to work off the job on this God- favored section, where there are a thousand blessings to one burden. W. T. Hutchens, Nicholson, Ga., had a severe attack of rheumatism. His feet, ankles and joints were swollen, and moving about was very painful. He was certainly in a bad way when he started to take Foley’s Kidney Fills. He says, “Just a few doses made me feel better, and now my pains and rheumatism are all gone and I sleep all night long.” For sale by all dealers. "What’s the matter, little boy?” asked the kind-hearted old gentleman of the youth who was yelling lustily. “Boo hoo, boo hoo.” sobbed the boy. "Come, come,” soothingly said the old gentleman. "Don't mind, don’t mind. ” "I didn’t,” shrieked the boy, ‘‘an’ that’s what I got licked fur!" Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days Your tlruKRUt will refund money if PAZO < >1 \T\fV.N P fails to cure any ease of Itching, Hliml. Weeding or Protruding Piles in 6 to 14 days. The first application gives Ease and Rest. 50c. Good Advice to the South. Now York Evening World. If a nation-wide cotton bargain day to boom the Hale of that useful commod- ; ity will help lift the cotton trade out of the dumps, let's have it. But ut the same time let's seize the j opportunity to point out to the . South ! that its economics are bad; that when it slakes everything on its cotton yield it shamefully neglectB the food-produc- ! ing possibilities of its soil, and that if it | continues to put all its eggs in one bas- | ket it cannot expect the Secretary of 1 the Treasury and the country at large to come to its rescue every time the basket collapses. The South has got to wake up to the plain fact that to cultivate nothing but cotton is waste and indolence. The Southern States can grow a greater va riety of foodstuffs at less cost than any ' other section of the country. Further- i more, they can grow forage and supply j green pasturage for stock every month I in the year. The Atlanta, Birmingham & Atlantic Railroad Co. is carrying on a vigorous campaign to convince the people of Georgia that the remedy for periodic depression in the South lies in winter cover crops. As General Passenger | Agent Croxton points out: "If our far mers woull aLcept our advice and pro- i ceed at once to grow sufficient food , crops to feed themselves, with a little I to spare, we would at this time be im measurably better off. This cotton de pression, however, will surely prove a v blessing in disguise, and beyond doubt j will do more than anything else to help' carry home to the farmer the practical! business wisdom of our food and cover | crop propaganda.” Why vast cotton fields should lie i brown and barren during many months of the year when they might easily be producing rich returns of vegetables and hay is one of the puzzles that the Northern travellers naturally explain by “Southern shiftlessness.” Every body understands that at the present moment the South is desperately call ing for help, because the war in Eu rope has played the mischief with its cotton markets. But surely the cotton producers cannot believe that when ever things go hard with them they can create popular demand for cotton by appealing to sentiment. It can hardly be expected that the rest of the country will always come to the aid of a section which risks its pros perity on a single product and lets high ly productive soil go otherwise to waste. —Parents who rear their sons in idle ness are doing them an unspeakable harm. Every boy is entitled to know by actual experience what hard manual labor means, and lo get the blessing that come from toughened muscles and tanned skin.—Conyers Record. WE ONLY ASK YOU TO Choose An Oil I I | Heater Wisely| 8 Let ns help you—for oil heat- 8 1 ers are different—some are better ■ I * than others. The one sure best™ lur Co years—the nut that produces the ■ most heat for the least cost, is the one ■ H '.vith tins trade-mark. Heats a cold* room in a "jifTy"—-to the remotest cor-1 I ners. The heat is clean and odorless. K Costs only one cent an hour, rf “ rler IMPROVLD-SMOKELESS ■ Ideal Oil Heaters | Depend on that| name for Jnstinjj satis- b faction. You can only ■ set genuine HAULER ■ (Ideal Heaters in this ■ __ ■'town of us. So come in, ■ I first chance you get. m and examine one critically. You will ■ m not he urged to buy—it must sell itself. * ■ But come in soon. ■ COMPARE THIS BAREER HEATER % with others and we will leave the result with you. JOHNSON HARDWARE CO. TELEPHONE 81, NEWNAN, GA. IT IS SERIOUS, Some Newnan People Fail to Realize the Seriousness of a Bad Back. The constant aching of a bad back, The weariness, the tired feeling, The pains and achesjof kidney ills, May result seriously if neglected. Dangerous urinary ^troubles often follow. A Newnan citizen shows you what to do. C. N. Baker, 14 Carmichael St., Newnan, Ga., says: "Riding over rough roads brought a severe strain on my kidneys and off and on for four years I suffered from a dull, weary ache across my back. The kidney secretions became highly colored and I realized that my kidneys needed treatment. A short time ago I heard about Doan’s Kidney Pills and procured a box from the Lee Drug Co. They quickly re lieved me and acted beneficially in every way. I shall always be grate ful for what this remedy has done for me." Price 50c. at all dealers. Don’t sim- plyask fora kidney remedy—get Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that Mr. Baker had. Foster-Milburn Co.. Props., Buf falo, N, Y. "John, there’s a burglar in the house. ” "Poor fellow; it’s hard to work for nothing." COULD SCARCELY WALK ABOUT And For Three Summer* Mr*. Vin cent Was Unable to Attend to Any of Her Housework. Pleasant Hill, N. C.—“I suffered for three summers," writes • Mrs. Walter Vincent, of this town, "and the third and last time, was my worst. 1 had dreadful nervous headaches and prostration, and was scarcely able to walk about. Could not do any of my housework. I also had dreadful pains in my back snd sides and when one of those weak, sinking spells would come on me, I would have to give up and lie down, until it wore off. I was certainly in a dreadful state of health, when I finally decided to try Cardui. the woman’s tonic, and 1 firmly believe I would have died if I hadn’t taken it. After I began taking Cardui, I was greatly helped, and all three bottles re lieved me entirely. I fattened up, and grew so much stronger in three months, I felt like an other person altogether.” Cardui is purely vegetable and gentle acting. Its ingredients have a mild, tonic effect, on the womanly constitution. ' Cardui makes tor increased strength, 1 improves the appetite, tones up the ner- j vous system, and helps to make pale, sallow cheeks, fresh and rosy, j Cardui has helped more than a million i weak women, during the past 50 years, j It will surely do for you, what it has done for them. Try Cardui today. ITVt.'s to: Ch.ttanoog. MeJIcln. Co., Ladles’ Ad visory Deot.. Chattanooga. Tens., for Special In- 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, The above picture represents a PROSPEP.ITY COLLAP. 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 y< u. jfrur.'iona on >>ur case and 64-page book, ’’Horns -m. . _ _ _ r i Tre.imvnt to Worntn.’’ «n, lo plain wr-pp,,. J-65 | £ W NAN ST EAM LAUNDRY