Newnan herald & advertiser. (Newnan, Ga.) 1909-1915, November 06, 1914, Image 8

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.Weak Heart Many people suiter from weak hearts. They may experience shortness of breath on exertion, pain over the heart, or dizzy feelings, oppressed breathing after rneala or their eyoa l>ecorne blurred, the heart is not Bufliciently strong to pump blood to the extremities, ami they have cold hands and feet, or floor appetite because of weakened bloml iijpply in llio uLimiu-li. A heart tonic and altcratiro should bu taken which haa no bad n l let - fires. L Such ia Dr. Piercers Golden Medical Discovery which ciontnlnn no dangerous narco Lieu or nJooko!. It hclptf tho human r>y :'rm in the constant rrmnufuctu* • > f rich, J holp«t.h« nlomnrh to aiisiina r •» <>r Ukoup tho proper ck mont ; ?r >r.i i ; helping diction ruid curing ciyupr pnin, nonrt-bum ami many *.inn iuE toms, f'Xi'"‘.iivP tbvsuo waste in conyali?K<vinr/i from f«* .*»•’■ , dawn, ucumnic, people, tho "Discovery" ia rofrouhing wnl viu**. In liquid nr trJttlel form at mart drug *torot or tend SO anr-ernt ttamps for trial l*or Io Dr. Pirrca't Inoalidu’ Hotel, Uuffalo, A'. /, Read Chapter VI! on Circulatory Orgnni in tho "Medical AdvUor'*—A Prwich eteth- liouml book of f f)03 rtaV 1 ^ «rnt on receipt of 31 omxrnl llmnpi, adflrrn ni n'.ryvc The Herald and Advertiser NEWNAN, FRIDAY, NOV. 6 A WOMAN'S W E A I* O N "What la u wcman’n weapon?" I nulicr! it charming triri. SIh* tlroppntl her IbhIioh nhyly And ntrokrrl « vagrant curl; Thon coriKcloualy nho murmured Thlti ronobud newly-cut; “1 have a Btronrr Hnnpieion Hit weapon in a pout" "What In u woman’s ww»pon v " I asked a lover tm©; He turned him to tho maiden With eyes of hoavonly blue, Her velvet lips were parted. All innocent of iruile, Anri eatrerly he answered. * “Her weapon is a smile." "What is a woman’s weapon?" i asked a poet the n; With sudden Initpirulion He seized upon hit* |m«i. "Oh. I could name a thousand," lie cried with accents clear; 'Hut a woman's HU real weapon. I Kraut you, is a tear.” Cotton Crop Overestimated. Macon Telcfrraph. It is evident to the close observer that the present cotton crop ia very much over-estimated. The ginners’ re ports, which are no doubt correct, are largely responsible for it. Tho big in crease in the amount of cotton pinned lo date is easily explained, but those who wish to hammer down the price of the staple do not wuil on explanations. If tho cotton exchanges were open tho real facts in tho case would lie taken into consideration and prices tixed in accordance. The n ports from Washington stute that the pinners' reports show the larg est amount of cotton pinned between Sept. 25 and Oct. IK that has ever been known. This is taken to mean that tho reports for the next month and the next one will show a similar increase, and that this increase will he main tained throughout the soason. There is nothing to combat this deduction on the part of those who wish to depress prices, but the cotton-growers and those wlio watch the movement from Growing: Winter Oats in the South. Every Southern farmer should prow cnouph oats to feed bin work stock dur- inp at least a portion of the year. In addition to furnishinp feed grain at less cost than it can he purchased, fall-sown oats prevent the washing of the soil, by which much fertility is frequently lost. There is still time to sow winter oats in the Gulf States, though this work should be done at once if pood results are to be obtained. According to spe cialists of the United States Depart ment of Agriculture, oats sown in the Southern States during October or the first half of November may be expect ed to produce at least twice the yield of grain obtained from spring seeding. Winter grain may be sown on land which produced a crop of cotton, corn or cowpca3 the past summer. If this land hns not already been plowed, it will he better to make the surface soil fine and loose with a disk or drag har row than to delay seeding by plowing now. Setter results are obtained from sowing with the drill than from broad cast seeding, though if a drill iB not available sowing the seed broadcast on well-prepared land usually results in a good stand. If the preceding crop was well fertilized, UK) to 200 pounds of acid phosphate will be all that the oats re quire this fall, though a little nitrate of soda will help the fall growth, especial ly if the Boil is not already well sup plied with nitrogen from the growing of cowpeas or some other legume. A top dressing of 50 to 100 pounds of ni trate of soda applied wliengrowthslarts in the spring will greatly increase tho yield. The variety of winter oats most com monly grown in the Soulh is Red Rust proof. Appier, Lawson, Hundred Bush el, Bancroft and Cook are selections or strains of Red Rust-proof which are said to be particularly valuable in some localities. The Fulghum is a promising new variety which matures a week or ten days earlier than the Red Rust- the cotton fields know (hat it is a false idea. Tho reason the ginners’report showed proof, nnd usually produces us much or up so large Jor the period named is be- more grain. As the kernels of all these cause the farmers had record-breaking j varieties are large, from 2 1-2 to II 1-2 weather for gathering the crop. Never ] bushels should be sown to tho acre, before have all things contributed to ! The smaller quantity is sufficient if the make the boils open so rapidly, and never I seed is drilled early on well prepared before have the fanners been blessed ; iand, while three bushels or more are needed when the seed is sown broad cast late in the season. The Winter Turf or Virginia Gray is a very hardy variety which is valuable for pasture or hay preduction, but which does not yield as much grain in the Southern States as the Red Rust-proof. On ac count of the small size < f the kernels, only 1 1-2 bushels of seed of this va- Important. j Bear in mind that Chamberlain's Tab lets not only move the bowels hut im prove the appetite and strengthen ! digestion. For sale by ail dealers. the with better labor conditions for gather ing it. The Dot sunshine through moat of September and October, with occa sional high winds, ninde the bolls open as if by magic. The zeal of tho far mers in trying to save tho crop while the weather was good and their deter mination to plant winter crops on much of their cotton land also aided in the rapid movement from the Gelds to the | rioty are required gin-houses. These facts explain the heavy gin ning up to date. Another fact will ex plain why much of the cotton will be lost in the fields. The present low price of tiic staple, together with the difficul ty in getting bagging in Which to pack it. the inability of many farmers and tenants to get advances for picking, and, finally, the general desire to close a rather disastrous cotton season and get down to other things - notably the winter crops will make many abandon their cotton fields. These things will serve to cut down what looked like an abnormally large production. These things would be considered by the cot ton exchanges, but not by the "‘hears" who catch their prey by whatever particularly sad. It was a ‘one-gallus’ contse they may find. follow, whose breeches struck him un- Tho man who thinks the last ginners' der the armpita aml h it him at the report is a fair index of the present other end of the knee . Tht . y buried W. the Georgia’s Part at a Funeral. Macon TcltwrapU During the lifetime of Henry Grady, who pleaded earnestly for development of Southern industries, he drew the following picture of a funeral which ha attended and in which Geor gia contributed only the corpse: "1 attended a funeral once in Pickens county. A funeral is not usually a cheerful object to me, unless I could pick the subject. Still, this funeral was c itton crop is deceived thereby and is not wise. Such reports merely make a him in tho midst of a marble quarry. They cut through solid stone to make grave, and yet a little tombstone . , , , - j thev put above him was from Vermont P o'haps, hut an in mst ice none the less. 1 „ • ' they buried him m the heart of a pine had matter worse. They do the cotton- ! |,j s growers an injustice, unintentionally Despondency Due to Indigestion. It is not at all surprising that persons who have indigestion become discour aged and despondent Here are a few words of hope and cheer for them by Mrs. Blanche Bowers, Indiana, Pa. "For years my digestion was so poor that 1 could only eat the ligliest food. I tried everything that 1 heard of to get relief, hut not until about a year ago. when 1 saw Chamberlain's Tablets ad vertised and got a bottle of them, did l lind the right tre&tnwnt. I soon began to improve, and since taking a few bot tles of the*m my digestion is line.” For sale by all dealers. The problem which confronts the far mer, next in importance lo distribution, is diversification. The Farmers Will Help Them selves. Atlanta Georgian There is a feeling of self-reliance and optimism, growing stronger every day, among the business men and farmers of Georgia and the South that is most gratifying. The one big thing that has depressed us has been the cotton situation —and that ia adjusting itself rapidly and sat isfactorily. The happiest circumstance of the en tire situation is the evident purpose of the cotton planters of the South to rely upon themselves for relief, and not any body else particularly. They expect, and will receive, rea sonable and businesslike assistance in shaping their affairs, hut very few of them are complaining nowadays or talk ing about giving up the ship. The farmers of Georgia will pay their debts—there never was any doubt, real, ly, about their doing that—and they will be assisted, as they should be. Once the liquidation gets well under way, matters must ease up all down the line. We have had many long and more or less important discussions of various phases of the cotton situation, hut it has at last simmered down to the rock bottom. The cotton fanners will work out their own salvation by getting the best they can out of the present market, and cutting down their next year’s acreage sharply and unmistakably. The cotton situation thus rationally adjusted, every other cloud must and will lift from the horizon, and atonco. Everybody ought to he convinced now that there is going to be no legislation, either State or National, for the relief of the cotton situation. The efforts of our Southern Senators and Representa tives in Congress to put some sort of relief measure through Congress have failed, and the Legislature of Texas has voted down by a big majority a bill which proposed to regulate cotton acre age in that State next year. Texas produces more than one-third of the cotton crop of the country, and if the acreage cannot be held down by law in that State it is useless for the Legisla tures of other States to pass drastic lawB on the subject. The situation is one in which our people are going to have to help themselves and do the best they can. The losses on this year's cot ton crop are going to fall upon those who made it, and will necessarily have to be shared by those who made ad vances on it.—Albany Herald. Foley 's Honey and Tar Compound for Croup. Croup scares you. The loud, hoarse, croupy cough, choking and gasping for breath, labored breathing, call for im mediate relief. The very first doses of Foley’s Honey and Tar Compound will master the croup. It cuts the thick mucous, clears away the phlegm and opens up and eases the air passages. For sule by all dealers. The average Georgia farmer gets up at the alarm of a Connecticut clock. Buttons his Chicago suspenders to a pair of Detroit overalls. Washes his face with Cincinnati soap in a Pennsylvania pan. Sits down to a Grand Rapids table. Eats Chicago meat and Indiana homi ny fried in Kansas lard on a St. Louis stove. Puts a New York bridle on a Ken tucky mule fed with Illinois corn. Ploughs a farm covered by an Ohio mortgage, with a Chattanooga plow. When bedtime comes he reads a chap ter from a bible printed in Boston. Says a prayer written in Jerusalem. Crawls under a blanket made in New Jersey, only to be kept awake by a Georgia dog—the only home product on the place. And then wonders why he cannot make money raising cotton! Help to organize rural life and make the country a better place in which to live. COULD NOT SLEEP, COULD NUT EAT Woman So Weak and Nervous Could Not Stand Her Chil dren Near Her — Vinol Changed Everything for Her Plant City, Fla.—“ I wish I could tell everybody about Vinol. For nine years I was in had health. I got so I could not sleep, and I could not stand it to have my children come near me. I could not even sew or do any heavy housework. I was simply tired all the time. I tried so many medicineB I could not recall them all, but nothing did me any good. One day a friend asked me to try Vinol and said it was the beet tonic she ever saw. I did so, and soon got the first good night’s sleep I had had for a long time. Now I sleep well, my appetite ia good, my nervousness is all gone and I am so strong and well I do all my house work and work in my flower garden without feeling tired or nervous. Vinol has made mo a well and happy woman. ’’ —Mrs. C. H. Miller, Plant City, Fla. Vinol contains the curative, healing principles of fresh cod livers (without oil| and tonic iron. We ask every weak, run-down, ner vous person in this vicinity to try Vinol, our delicious cod liver and iron tonic without oil, on our guarantee to return their money if it falls to benefit JOHN R. CA'IES DRUG CO., Newnan A party of Clevelanders entertained some holiday visitors last week, and hav ing shown them everything interesting in Cleveland proper they had to take them out to Newburg for a view of the asylum. The superintendent was in a genial frame of mind and he conducted the hunch personally. "Here is a queer case, ladies,” he said, pausing at a particularcell. “This man has a delusion that, he possesses the motive power that runs the uni verse. He is perfectly harmless, but he actually believes that without him the world would not move. Strange no tion, isn’t it?’’ "Why, not at all,” exclaimed one of the women. "My husband has the same idea, and he always had it. Is he crazy too?’’ —Cleveland Plain Dealer. A shy young man had been calling on the sweetest girl in the world for many moons, but, being bashful, his suit pro gressed slowly. Finally she decided it was up to her to start, something, so the next time he called she painted to the rose in his buttonhole and said: "I’ll give you a kiss for that rose." A crimson flu-ih overspread his coun tenance, but the exchange was made after some hesitation on his part. Then he grabbed his hat and Btarted to leave the room. "Why, where are you going,” she asked in surprise. "To the — er — florist for more roses,” ho called from the front door. WHY IT SUCCEEDS Because It’s for One Thing Only, and Newnan People Appreciate It. Nothing can be good for everything. Doing one thing well brings success. Doan’s Kidney Pills are lor one thing only. For week or disordered kidneys. Here is Newnan evidence to prove their worth. A. M. Askew, 76 E. Washington St., Newnan, Ga., says: "You may use my indorsement for Doan’s Kidney Pills, as they have been of benefit to me as well as others of my family. After seeing ene or two cures made by this remedy in my own home, I did not hesitate to try it myself for an annoy ing attack of kidnev trouble. My back pained me most of the time, and morn ings I was stiff and lame. If I did much stooping, I suffered from a dull, heavy ache across my loins. A few boxes of Doan’s Pills, procured at the Lee Drug Co., rid me of every symptom of kidney complaint.” Price 50c, atall dealers. Don’t simply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan’s Kidney Pills-the same that Mr. Askew had. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. in 6 to 14 Days fund money if l’AZO Piles < ured Y«ir »l'uXK«bi will OlNVMEjT J-ils i*t cure auy case Itching, blind, Blonlingor Protruding Pile* in6to 14 d*>t». The lir»t application give* Tlasc auU Kc»L «*x. forest, and yet the pine cotlin was im ported from Cincinnati. They buried him within touch of an iron mine, and yet the nails in his coflin and the iron in the shovel that dug his grave came from Pittsburg. They buried him be side the best sheep-grazing country on earth, and yet the wool in the cotlin hands, and tile coffin handles themselves, were brought from the North. The South did not furnish anything on earth for that funeral hut the corpse and the hole in the ground. They buried him in a New York coat, a Boston pair of shoes, a pair of breeches from Chicago nnd a shirt from Cincinnati." S Saved Girl’s life [ Of Old Sires. Other Re-edics Won’t Curt i**’-. nn matter >»♦ !,<*-*• long standing, cam The vrr.nr - art? cured ir ibe wiindrrtul. • M reliable Dr. Porter • Antiseptic Hcaliuc * HI. It relieve# i'**.. uu- ibe wujw £c, iOc, $1.00. “I want to tell you what wonderful benefit I have re- ^ ceived from the use of Thedford’s Black-Draught,” writes Mrs. Sylvania Woods, of Clifton Mills, Ky. ^ “It certainly has no equal for la grippe, bad colds, ^ liver and stomach troubles. I firmly believe Black-Draught jig" ^ saved my little girl’s life. When she had the measles, V they went in on her, but one good dose of Thedford’s J ^ Black-Draught made them break out, and she has had no * more trouble. I shall never be without ^ BLACk-DraugHT J in my home.” For constipation, indigestion, headache, dizzi- ® % ness, malaria, chills and fever, biliousness, and all similar ^ £ ailments, Thedford’s Black-Draught has proved itself a safe, ft reliable, gentle and valuable remedy. ^ji # If you suffer from any of these complaints, try Black- 4 ♦ Draught It is a medicine of known merit Seventy-five J years of splendid success proves its value. Good for 5 young and old. For sale everywhere. Price 25 cents. a D-W! • WE ONLY ASK YOU TO ii7n eh m rat stssi hob k-be Choose Mud QiB a Meatey M/SseS^j Let us heir) you—for oil heat- ® COMPARE THIS us tiro different—some are better ft] ban others. The one sure best ** ^PEARLER HEATER •Ui this {r-udo-murk. Heats u-C'ikin ‘ ' ,„. a Jiffy"—to the remotest t v- fill ! r , ° i”. clean nn»i odorles*. JL-. t l only one cent an hour, K*l 'f 81 with others IMPXOVID-.UMOIlElf.1S Ideal Oil Urate I Depend on that n.-im.j f,.r 1 anting’ nut in fliction. Y-.ti c.in oniv Kot vviMiuine JiARLKR Ideal Hrtuter* in thi» tnwn of mi. i->o conic in, first cii:in"e you y.et, one critically. Von -wiit buy—it must sell and we will leave the result with vou. 9 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. T. G. s y J u ... If. ® ivV." - 'jSWSK*,:? 1 The shove picture represents a PROSPERITY COLLAR MOULDER, which uses an entirely new principle in collar-finishing. When finished on th ;s machine those popular turn-down collars can have no rough edges, and they also have extra tie space. Thercollars last much longer, too. Let us show you. NEWNAN STEAM LAUNDRY