Newspaper Page Text
To the Woman Who
Realizes She Needs Help
You are nervous. You have "crying spells. You are
dejected. You don’t sleep well. You have backache. You
have lost ambition for your work. You are beginning to
feel old and took old.
These symptoms, more than likely, are produced by some weakness,
derangement or irregularity peculiar to the feminine organism.
Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription
(In Tablet or Liquid Form)
will «*iid you in regaining youthful health and strength —just as it lias been
doing for over forty years for women who have been in the same condition of
health you now find yourself. It soothes and invigorates. It upbuildsand uplifts.
Your medicine dealer will supply you in tablet or liquid form, or send 50
onc-cent stamps for trial box. Address Dr. V. M. Pierce, Duffalo, N. Y
Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets regulate Stomach, Liver and Bowels. Easy to take.
The Herald and Advertiser
NEWNAN, FRIDAY. OCT. 1G
T it E (J R E A T E ST Gl F T .
A womni'K hi*art in a wonderful thing;
If Ih inad»* of moltrn i*old.
'Tin Maun* h ami true
Ah the* honviMi'H own bin**
And thu l"vr flM*m m*v«*r grown old.
Within thi* hi-arl Im an ondlrsa world
Of folt but un*<H>n flilngi
Tlmy live* nnd grow.
Thai wi* may know
That lovn In th« king of kings.
A woman's heart in a n aafMy-vault,
Wh«*r** you deposit your lift*, your whola.
Shr turns the key
That none rnav ms*.
Ami guards It with lu*r aoul.
ThIt* Ham** h**nrt In an **ndh*HH thing.
If grown anil oxpanda with yeara.
’TiH tender and Htrong,
Forgiving lit** wrtmit.
That brinxn flic* bit tor tear*.
A woman'll heart is flu* groalosl gift
God rvor guvo to rnan;
’Tiw hia atronglli. hia life.
Through aunnhine and Htrifi*
Ilia houI is in h**r liumlx.
I would ruthor havo a wnmarTn heart
Than tin* world anti all of itw gold
For ’tin ataunrh and true
An I he hoaven’a own blue.
And the love that never or row* old.
Hoeing Their Own Row.
Wall Street .Journal.
Much will be gained in the cotton
marketing crisis when it is realized that
the center of gravity of the problem
has been shifted from Washington
and the shoulders of the Government to
the cotton-growers in their relations
with their creditors. Cotton-growing
requires lurgo borrowing. The lend
ers are loeal hankers and merchants.
Secretary Houston, of the Department
of Agriculture, has suggested that the
contractual relations between hanks
ami merchants on the one hand, and
cotton-growers cn the other, is the way
to restrict acreage and diversify crops.
In making this suggestion Secretary
Houston has taken a leaf from the
hanking experience of more than one
community in providing agricultural
credits. The Minnesota and the Dakota
hankers within recent years practically
forced upon farmers the policy of grow
ing livestock on condition of lending
them money. Many of these people
had cultivated wheat so continuously
as to wear out the soil und bankrupt
their credit. The bankers looked into
the situation, saw the remedy and ap
plied it with splendid effect.
The plan of providing crops, rotation
systems and general features of farm
management has for hundreds of years
been incorporated into the leaseholds
between landlord nnd tenant in British
agriculture. There is no reason why it
should not he used to give a sounder
direction to Southern farming. Sec
retary Houston’s plan is that the pro
portion of the acreage devoted to food-
s'ulfs should be increased by agree
ments so that cotton areas might be
reduced and thereby prevent prices
next season from being unduly de
pressed. This can work no hardship to
Southern interests, because they im
port vast quantities of wheat, corn and
meat. Texas imported several million
bushels of corn from Argentina last
year, und Georgia spent $,‘>0,(100,000 for
Western corn and other products.
Great progress has been made in the
latter State, whore it is said that DO
per cent, of the income of certain fam
ing districts is already derived from
other crops than cotton.
Battling away on this line, common
business sense will show not only the
way to get out of the present cotton
predicament, hut also the way to avoid
any such catastrophe in the future.
But it is the South's own prohibition,
after emergency currency and availa
ble Treasury funds have been put at
its service.
The way to work it out is to begin
now, by sow ing anil planting crops for
which there is abundant market and by
which the cotton acreage will next
spring he automatically restricted.
What Would You Do?
There ure many times when one
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 than to take Chamberlain’s
Cough Remedy? It is highly recom
mended hy people who have used it for
years and know its value. Mrs. O. K.
Sargent, Peru. !nd., says, ‘'Chamber
lain's Cough Remedy is worth its
weight in gold and 1 take pleasure in
recommending it." For sale hy all
dealers.
Every man has a hobby and every
woman two or three.
•
Piles Cured in 6 to y 4 Days
Your drugget will rrfAml mo.iey if 1WZ0
OINTMENT tail* to cute any case oi Itching,
Blind, Hlerdmg or I’rotrudmg l'ilcs in 6 to 14 day v
The Utst application gives Ease and Kc»i. 50c,
What a Man Can Do on An 80-
Acre Farm.
Homo Tribune.
Mr. J. H. Porter came here from
Northeast Georgia a number of years
ago and began business in the city; but
he is a natural farmer and could not he
kept off the land. He therefore bought
an old place of Ho acres, very much run
down, proceeded to improve it. 1 was
on his place recently, and found it in
a high state of cultivation, planted as
follow:
He had about 20 acres of corn as
fine and as full of ears as I had ever
seen in the best corn-growing States.
He had about 10 acres in peas, (planted
after oats) ready for cutting, which
will yield not less than three tons of
hay to the acre. He had 10 acres in
alfalfa two years old, cut five times,
and yielding more than a ton to the
acre at each cutting. He had 10 acres
in corn and peas (after oats,) in which
field sixty-five pure-bred and graded
hogs were feeding. He is preparing
this 10 acreB for alfalfa seeding this
fall. He had one large barn nearly
tilled with alfalfa hay, all baled except
the last cutting. He had another barn
nearly filled with alfalfa, and other
hay and corn; and he had under shelter
a tremendous pile of oat straw. He
bail nearly SOI) bushels of oats in the
house ready for selling and seed this
fall. Ho had 10 acres of woods and
bermuda pasture. His farm machin
ery and tools are well kept, and put
away when not in use. All his fences
and gates were in the best of repair. I
did not see a stalk of cotton on the
whole place, yet two or three years
ago, where he now has alfalfa, be
grow two bales to the acre. He tells
me that he can make more money off
the kind of crops he is now growing
than he can out of cotton. He has
brought his farm to its present high
state of cultivation, and made a hand
some profit each year.
What he has done can be done by
any farmer.
Too Much Complaining.
Moultrie Observer.
We are having entirely too much
complaining.
Too much talk about panic and hard
times.
We have no panic, and we have no
hard times. This part of the world is
wonderfully blessed. We have peace,
while millions are engaged in war.
We have plenty, while millions arc-
reduced to want.
We have jobs, while millions are
thrown out of work.
A depressed condition of the cotton
murket, (which we trust will not last
many weeks,) Has embarrassed a great
many who have debts that are falling
due.
Money is scarce, because we have
i thousands of bales of cotton tied up.
None are suffering, so far as we have
' learned, and none likely to suffer.
The grumbling is being done by those
I who have much to be thankful for.
! They should be careful lest atlliction of
a more serious character befall them.
If we continue to work, and exercise
discretion in our expenditures, we will
all pull through in good shape.
If you are one of the growlers, you
should apologize to your friends and go
to work and cut out this hard times
| talk.
Especially do we advise that you
refrain from relating all the troubles
of your life when you are approached
hy one whom you owe, or one who is
soliciting business. Just a brief state
ment that you cunnot give an order
will suffice.
Toe Many Plans.
Albany Herald.
I'uhlic meetings, big conventions and
conferences for the avowed purpose
of "solving the problems" with whii h
the Southern cotton-growers have
been confronted by conditions grow
ing out of the European war have
been the order cf the day all over the
country during the eight or ten week3
since the outbreak of the conflict.
There have also been official conferences
at the national capital and bills upon
bills and resolutions galore introduced
in Congress for the “relief" of the
growers of the lleecy staple. But
what have all these conventions, con
ferences ami bills and resolutions
accomplished'’ Absolutely nothing.
The situation is a deluge of resolutions,
plans, theories and initiative legislation
in the midst of which the cotton grower
finds himself swamped. As soon as
one plan is suggested somebody else
enmes forward with "something bet
ter.” And bo the plans have been
piling up until there is a condition of
chaos and interminable confusion.
Outside of what has been accom
plished by local or community meetings
in which bankers, cotton-growers and
business men have been brought to
gether in a spirit of co-operation,
nothing has been done to "save the
farmer" in the present crisis, and
nothing will be done which will relieve
him of the responsibility of looking af
ter his own affairs. Most of them now
fully realize this, and are acting accord
ingly.
The Home Merchant.
Andalusia (Ala.) Star.
He has credited you through the sum
mer season and you ought to give him
your cash in the fall.
It helps your town to trade at home,
and it helps you.
It costs you less to trade at home,
and you can buy everything you need
here.
When you go elsewhere shopping you
are taking money out of circulation at
home, and you have to pay railroad
fare and a big price for what you buy
besides.
When you need help for charitable
institutions to whom do you go?
To your home merchant.
When you want help of any sort that
is to be secured by popular contribu
tions, to whom do you go?
To your home merchant.
You do not dare apply to the big
houses in other cities for help for any
of these affairs.
Does it not seem right and proper for
you, when you want to make a pur
chase, to give your home merchant the
preference?
All things considered, isn’t it his due
that you give him an opportunity to
supply your wants?
“Once again my orders have been
disobeyed,” said the master in a cer
tain public school recently. "Who is
the miscreant?" Not a soul answered,
and a tragic silence prevailed. “This
matter shall be settled once and for
all," he went on in the same icy man
ner, "and if none will tell, every boy
in the class shall be thrashed.”
Every boy, therefore, was duly
thrashed, but not one would breathe
the culprit’s name until suddenly, as
the last boy was about to receive his
share of punishment, the cane was
withheld. Fixing a keen look on the
lad, the master said, "Now, if you tell
me who did this action I will not pun
ish you.”
"All right, sir; I did it,” came the
hesitating reply.
Foley Cathartic Tablets.
You will like their positive action.
They have a tonic effect on the bowels,
and give a wholesome, thorough clean
ing to the entire bowel tract. Stir the
liver to healthy activity and keep stom
ach sweet. Constipation, headache, dull,
tired feeling never atllict those who use
Foley Cathartic Tablets. Only 25c. For
sale by all dealets.
Ask the Central of Ceorgia Ticket
Agent.
Following special occasions will be
held at the points named on the dates
specified:
Atlanta, Ga., Oct. 14-1S. — Brotherhood
of St. Andrews.
Ft. Worth Texas. Oct. 14-17.—Annual
Meeting Farmers’ National Congress.
Richmond, Ya., Oct. 1U-10.—American
Bankers' Association.
New Orleans, l.a., Oct. 20-23. — Inter
national Associotion Fire Engineers.
For information as to fares and sched
ules consult any ticket agent or rep
resentative of
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RAILWAY
"The Right Way”
Little Mary's mother was writing a
letter to her sister one day. and Mary,
who did everything her mother did,
was writing also. As she began she
looked up and asked:
"Mamma, how do you °pell ‘Aunt’—
the kind that ain't a bug?"
E
Tells How Vinol Restores
Strength and Vitality to the
Weak, Worn-Out Ones in
Her Charge.
Rosary Hill Home, Hawthorne, N.Y
— "I have been at work among the sick
and poor for nearly eighteen years, and
whenever I have used Vinol for run
down, weak or emaciated patients, they
have been visibly benefited by it One
patient, a young woman, was so weak
and ill she could hardly creep to my door
for aid, and was leaning on a friend’s
arm. I supplied Vinol to her liberally
and in a month when she returned to
thank me I hardly recognized her. She
was strong, her color charming and her
cheeks rounded out. These words are
uttered from my heart, in order that
more people may know about Vinol, as
there is nothing makes me happier in
the world than to relieve the sick.”—
Mother M.Alphonsa Lathrop.O.S.D.,
Hawthorne, N.Y.
Such disinterested and reliable testi- j
mony should convince everyone of the
merits of Vinol, our delicious cod liver
and iron tonic to build up health and
strength for all weakened and nervous
conditions, whether caused from over- I
work, worry orchronic coughs and cold3.
If Vinol fails to benefit we return your
money.
JOHN R. CATES DRUG CO., Newnan
Obituary.
No sadder tidings ever reached
friends than the death of Mr. Will A.
Thompson, which occurred near Corner
Branch on Sept. 16, from an attack of
typhoid fever. He was sick two weeks.
His condition at times was apparently
improved, but each rallying spell proved
a disappointment. He grew steadily
weaker, until finally death ended his
sufferings.
The deceased was 28 years and 8
months old. He was not a member of
any church, but was a Christian at
heart, and a true and faithful friend.
Sympathetic and warm-hearted, wher
ever sickness or sorrow existed he was
ever ready to lend a helping hand. We
can’t see why he was taken so soon,
but God saw fit to claim him as His
own. The home seems desolate to the
broken-hearted wife. But we would
say to his dear ones, "Weep not for
Will, for he is only sleeping and will
live again—not here, but in that bright
and glorious city "not made with hands,
eternal in the heavens.” If it be true
God plans for every soul a mission,
surely it was his to brighten the home
circle for a few years, and then lead
their hearts and thoughts heavenward.
Our Christian faith must not permit
murmuring, nor indulge in hopeless
grief, for we shall meet again.
Ruth Pritchett.
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 Pills.
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.
On his eighty-fourth birthday Paul
Smith, the veteran Adirondack hotel
keeper, who started life as a guide and
died owning a million dollars' worth of
forest land, was talking about boundary
disputes with an old friend.
"Didn't you hear of the lawsuit over
a title that I had with Jones down in
Malone last summer?” asked Paul.
The friend had not heard.
"Well,” said Paul, “it was this
way: I sat in the court-room before
the case opened with my witm
around me. Jones bustled in, stopped,
looked my witnesses over carefully,
nesses?’ 'They are,
yoa win,’ said he. ‘I’
nesses twice myself.’
said I. ‘Then
WE ONLY ASK YOU TO
Choose An Oil |
Heater Wiselyj COMPARE THIS
Let us help you—for oil heat-1
ers are different—some are better I
than others. The one sure best *
l"r 20 years—the one thut produces the I D A D| fl) HF ATTD
most heat for the least cost, Is the one® llL_/\ I LK
wth this trade-mark. Heats a cold ■
room in a "jiffy"—to the remotest cor-1
n<*rs. The heat is clean nnd odorless. K
Costs only one cent an hour, |j
with others
and ive will leave the
result withvou.
Ket genuine DARLER
Ideal Heaters in this ■
town of us. So come in. |
first chance you gee m
ir'd examine one critically. Shut will ■
i.-o he urged to buy—it must sell itself. ™
SI But come m soon. ■
JOHNSON HARDWARE CO.
TELEPHONE 81, NEWNAN, GA.
Sickness Comes
With Cold Floors
r A cojd house in the morning.
The children whimpering
and chilly.
Next thing—the doctor.
Why take this chance?
Cole’s Original
Hot Blast Heater
will maintain an even temperature in
your home day and night. The greatest
floor heater known.
Burns soft coal—lignite—hard coal
— or wood.
The fire is never out from fall till
spring in this great heater and fuel saver.
It will cut your fuel bill in half.
Come in and see it. It is worth
your while.
See the name "Cole’s” on the feed door « : <
of each stove. None genuine without it
DARDEN-GANP HDW. CO,
Newnan, Georgia
1
f\
1
ll
•
Some people are too dull to cut even ;
an undesirable acquaintance.
STOMACH TROUBLE
FOR FIVE YEARS
Majority of Friends Thought Mr.
Hughes Would Die, But
One Helped Him to
Recovery.
Pomeroyton, Ky.—In interesting ad
vices from this place, Mr. A. J. Hughes
writes as follows: "I was down with
stomach trouble for five (5) years, and
would have sick headache so bad, at
times, that 1 thought surely I would die.
1 tried different treatments, but they
did not seem to do me any good.
1 got so bad, 1 could not eat or sleep,
and all my friends, except one. thought I
would die. He advised me to try
Thedford’s Black-Draught, and quit
taking other medicines. I decided to
take his advice, although I did not have
any confidence in it.
1 have now been taking Black-Draught
for three months, and it has cured me—
haven’t had those awful sick headaches
since I began using if.
I am so thankful for what Black-
Draught has done for me.”
Thedford’s Black-Draught has been
found a very valuable medicine for de
rangements of the stomach and liver. It
is composed of pure, vegetable herbs,
contains no dangerous ingredients, and
acts gently, yet surely. It can be freely
used by young and old, and should be
kept in every family chest.
Get a package today.
Only a quarter. j. a
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
j also have extra tie space. The collars last much longer, too. Let us show you.
NEWNAN STEAM LATJNDBY
BUGGIES! BUGGIES!
A full line of the best makes. Best value foi
the money. Light running, and built to stand ^
the wear. At Jack Powell’s old stand. J
J. T. CARPENTER g
*■ *