Newnan herald & advertiser. (Newnan, Ga.) 1909-1915, November 20, 1914, Image 8

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I Men Fight Oft The!? fit X fy. I > Napoleon pn said. Amnn IU I l I wl# I 1 3 will) a weak stomach is 4 pretty sure to ho a poor fighter. It is difficult— almost impossible lor anyone, man or woman, if digestion is fmor, to succeed in business or sociully—or to enjoy life. In tablet or liquid form Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery helps weak stomachs to strong, healthy action- helps them to digest the fisid that makes the pood, rich, rod blood which nourishes the entire body. This vegetable remedy, to a great extent, put3 the liver into activity—oils the machinery of the human system so that those who spend their working hours nt tho desk, behind the counter, or in tho home are rejuvenated into vigorous health. linn liroueht rnllrf tn many thousands every year for over forty yearn. It can r> I'f’Vf you ami doubtl* m renUtrv to you your formur health and atren^th. At |, att v.ui 11w• • ii to yourm-lf to ir.w it a tnnl. Sol I l.v MHicinrDcalor*or send fiOo fur tnal Imix of Tablet*—Dr. l'iurce’n Invalid*' HotelAc .Surgical Institute, Dull'alo,N.Y. You esn have Dr. Pierce's Common Senso Medical Adviser of 1QC3 Parjes for 31o. BBKnxsrv.vr.’raB.TJi IlflTT-‘—TTfTMB The Herald and Advertiser NEWNAN, FIR DAY, NOV. 20. AN AUTUMN MESSAGE. The gold on rod i* wnvintr IIh yellow plumi'H in air, Arid little* blue-eyed uHlcrN Art* riaricinK every wham. Jack Front In slyly creoplnn: » O'er meadow and o'er hill, CuitlnK all HortH of cnperH When nlghtH aro Ion# and chill. Th.* Hummer bird a have left uh. 'I h<* Mummer flow©ri», too. Hut these two nturdy ulofMomi A menaaffo have for you: •Tut on your hriahnat faces," They any. "When akii'M are drear. He over In your tdacca To gladden and to cheer. "Then every month that paanea Will aeom h»i bright, ho dear, You cannot ehooae between them From out tho whole kImiI year." (Helen M. HiehurdHon. them out, and in which good-natured patronesess hold up their friends and make them huy tickets. Now, these girls have plenty of intel ligence. They could make good livings if they would only come down off their high horseB and plough a little, and do something practical, give some use ful service that the world needs. You don’t see every man trying to be an actor, or writer, or doctor, or law yer. If you did you would see among men as much wholesale starvation and fail ure as you do among women. Men realize that they have got to be grocers and butchers, bakers and candlestick ma kers, and that, while we can do with out the fine arts on a flinch, we have got to have the common necessities, and that the purveyors of them are the ones that make the money. So I entreat the young women who are contemplating going to work to sup port themselves to choose something useful to do, something practical to do. Do the work that lies closest to you so well that somebody will not only be willing hut anxious to pay you for do ing it. There’s never any dearth of a market for a super-excellent quality of goods, and this applies to. labor more than anything else, The world is flood ed with amateurs, but there are never enough experts in any line to go around. Many a girl who fails as an actress could make a fortune raising chickens if she put half as much study on the temperament of a hen as she does on the psychology of Lady Macbeth. Many a girl who paints dauby pictures that she can’t sell for $2 apiece would have women breaking their necks to pay her $75 for hats. Many a girl who is starv ing along trying to write pot boilers could be riding in her own automobile if she had worked as hard at the art of keeping boarders as she does at trying to learn to write. Do something practical and useful, girls. The world has always got to be fed and clothed, and washed and cleaned, and have its sox darned, and its bills kept, and as long as you minister to the world's comfort you can always get paid for it. Don't be misled by the glamor about any kind of work. The only fancy brand on work is the dollar mark. And the way to get that is to do something that the people really need. DO SOMETHING USEFUL. Dorothy Dlx, in Atlanta Georgian. This is a time of peculiar uphcavul in tho feminine world. Up to now the av erage American girl lias expected to stay at home until she was married and then go to a home of her own. And she could fairly safely count on getting married. In the past few years, however, this comfortable programme of life has been altered. The high cost, of living Has made it impossible for the man in ordinary circumstances to support a family of girls in comfort. The girls themselves have heard so much about thi' parasitic woman that they huve be come ashamed of hanging like a mill stone around a poor old father’s neck. Also, tlie chances of catching a husband are greatly diminished, and young wo men of presentable appearance are no longer certain, as they formerly were, of getting married. All of these conditions have turned the thoughts of girls toward self-sup port. This is well. There is no more reason why an intelligent and able-bod ied young woman should be dependent on somebody else for her living tiiun there iH why a man should be. It de velops a woman's brain and brawn and character to do some regular work whereby site earns honest money and acquires the strength tn stand on her own feet instead of Hopping, like a limp dishrag, on some stronger individual. Hut it takes a long time to rid our selves of the superstition of the past, and one of the most persistent of these hoodoos is that when a woman works she must always do some lady-kind of work — that is, something artistic or lit erary and that is genteel—just as it was considered in the past more refined and elegant for a woman to do embroid ery than it was to do plain, useful sew ing. For this reason at least 90 per cent, of the girls who want to work want to go on the stage, or to recite, or do par lor entertaining, or write, or paint. Also, they want to do these things in a dilettante manner and receive large re wards for their labors. They overlook the fact that to succeed in the fine arts us well as in common occupations you huve to slave like a dray horse, and that there are absolutely no short cuts or quick roads to success. Behind ev ery star on the stage ami every well- kmnvn writer there lies an apprentice ship that lias been served in toil and sweat and blood. Now. of course, if a girl has the di vine lire, and has given unmistakable signs of a genius for acting, or paint ing, or writing, she does well to choose the calling to which tier talent dedicates her. Hut there is no such tiling as a girl making herself into a Maude Ad ams because she would like to be on the stage, or into a Helen Glasgow be- . cause she would be pleased to see her!*' 1 m ‘ 1 ‘' see a scoro °i people name in print. Nature settled that!'' 0 ™ 1 °* * lan ' ou are ’ * ,u digging your own grave, and playing pallbearers into the bargain? Man, you must do your work. Smile, even “Time to Cheer Up.” The Memphis News-Scimitar says it is time to cheer up. “The election is over and Thanksgiving and Christmas are coming.” says the News-Scimitar. "Cheer up. Business is better, and nothing is needed but courage and hustle to make it better still. “Cheer up! “The world is taking your photo graph. Look pleasant. Of course you have your troubles—troubles you can’t tell the policeman. You find life a rugged road whose stones often hurt your feet. Nevertheless — “Cheer up! “Our ills are largely imaginary. If we were really on the brink of bank ruptcy, or if there were no thorough fares through our sorrows, we would clear our brows, set our teeth and make the best of it. The troubles of to-day we take care of. It is the troubles of yesterday and to-morrow that give us nine-tenths of our worries. “Cheer up! “What right have you to carry a picture of your woebegone face and funeral ways about among your fel lows who have troubles of their own? If you must whine or sulk or scowl, go to the woods or the unfrequented lanes. "Why, man alive!—in a ten minutes’ print question for her once and for all before she was horn, and all the work of the world will never take the place of tal ent. it’s ns foolish for an ungifted girl to think that she can make herself a writer or an actress as it would be for s short, stubby woman to think she could make herself into a tall, willowy goddess. It simply can’t be done. It is my unhappy lot in life to see hundreds of these would-be artist and actor and writer girls who come to the city seeking their fortunes and who find no market for their poor wares, and are stranded in its hard streets. There's hariilv a week in the year that half a dozen of these forlorn creatures are not knocking at m.v door, begging me to help them launch some sort of concert or entertainment or benefit to help though it must be through tears — which will speedily dry with smiling. “It may be your teal trouble is self ishness — ingrown selfishness. Your life may be too self-centered. You may imagine your tribulations are worse than others have to bear. You feel sorry for yourself—the meanest sort of pity. It is a pathetic illusion. Rid yourself of it and cheer up!" Whenever You Need n Cleneral Tonic Take drove’s The Old Standard Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic is equally valuable as a General Tonic because it contains tho well known tonic properties of QUININE and IRON. It acts on the Liver, Drives out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and Builds up the Whole System. 50 cents. Uncle John on the War Situation The F’rotrrcBRlvo Farmer. “Been to town, Uncle John?” asked the agricultural man, as Uncle John, BBtride his gray mule, drew up by the side of a field the dee-monstrator, as Uncle John called him, was inoculating preparatory to planting crimson clover. “Yes,” said the old man, "I hearn that they wan't no mnrket fer cotton, so I ’lowed I’d go to Laurel and see the Hicks Mercantile Co. about it, an’, by gum! I found they didn’t want no cot ton shore ’nuff! I went ail over town an’ ast every feller I seen an’ the best any of ’em would do was to ofTer to loan me twenty-five dollars a bale on it. Said they didn’t want it at all; that Yir- rup and Stir-up wuz in a big rucus, an’ all the ships wus sunk an’ the mills shot down, an’ that them fool furriners wus so busy a shootin’ each other that they wuz a payin’ mighty little attention to whether they had any clothes or not, anyway. "Yes,” Uncle John went on, taking a chew of navy, “it seems that a feller over there they call the Kayser got to itching fur a fight, an’ pulled otr his coat an’ axed the Czar of sumthin’-or- other wh it he wuz goin’ to do about it. Then the Czar didn’t say nothin', but started to shuckin’ his coat, too. From this the thing started, an’ now they say that Ireland an’ Jay-pan and Novy Scoshy air into it, with Turkey an’ Pee- ru a-gettin’ ready, an' that what they all want ain’t cotton, but sumpthin’ to cat. “What gits me,” grumbled the old man, picking his teeth with a splinter from off the rail fence, “is that I acted the fool agin this year an’ didn’t plant much corn, thinkin’ I’d strike it rich with a big crop o’ cotton. I made the cotton, all right, but now I can’t sell the stufL Didn’t plant much corn, an’ the early drouth got it, an’ now it’s up to a dollar and a quarter a bushel, an’ likely to go higher. “Say,” he concluded, pulling his mule away from the rank grass in the fence corner, preparatory to riding on, “what wuz that I hearn you a-sayin’ tother day about treatin’ oats fer smut? I bought ten bushels to-day an’ wish you’d come over an’ help me put ’em in right. I kin put in my clover the same day an’ you kin help me out on the monopolation. I got stung pretty bad ail aroun’ this year, what with this war an’ me being an ole fool be sides, but next year one thing’s cer tain; I may raise some cotton, but you kin bet your bottom dollar I’ll raise sumpthin’ for me an’ my folks an’ crit ters fust.” Hack! Hack! Hack! With raw, tickling throat, tight chest, sore lungs, you need Foley’s Honey and Tar Compound, and quickly. The first dose helps; it leaves a soothing, healing coating as it glides down your throat; you feel better at once. Every user is a friend. For sale by all dealers. A Notable Exception. A quaint old negro stepped up to the window of the ticket office and hurried ly demanded a ticket for Pig-foot Junc tion. “Hope de train won’ be long corn in’,” he Baid anxiously, “My nephew’s ve’y low.” ‘About ten minutis, uncle,” the agent reassured him. The old man went to the platform and studied the bulletin board very seri ously. Then he returned to the win dow. “Did you say my train would be ’long in ten minutes, suh?” he asked, anxiously. “Yes, uncle.” “Jest axed you, suh, ’cause dat dere board oay, ‘All trains on time ’cept one,’ and I was jest figurin’dat one would be mine.” “All the trains are on time. Some one’s tampered with the bulletin board!” declared the agent excitedly, and rushed to the platform. He stared for a moment at the board, then at the old negro. Slowly his face relaxed into a broad grin. The bulle tin read: “All trains on time—Sept. 1.” Important. Bear in mind that Chamberlain's Tab lets not only move the bowels but im prove the appetite and strengthen the digestion. For sale by all dealers. When Mrs. Stephen Bendare, 22 years old and pretty, went to her home in Jolliet, Ill., the other afternoon with her 1 year-old son, she found her hus band was gone. John Wandler, who boarded at the same house, was wait ing for her. “Come here and kiss me,” said John. “Y'ou're mine. Steve was hard up and 1 bought you for $1." Mrs. Steve was so dazed that she let John kiss her once or twice, but wkei he told her to hurry up dinner she ran to a police station. Steve was found trying to buy a ticket to San Francisco for SI. In the Joliet police court next morn ing he said that he loved his wife, but needed the money. The judge told Bendare he was an easy mark, and sent him to the county jail for thirty days. John got his dollar back. How To Give Quinine To Children. FFBRII.INKlsthe trade-mark name given to an improved Quiniue. It is a Ta-teless Syrup, plena, nnt to take and does not disturb the stomach. Children take it mill never know it is Omnine. Also especially adapted to adults who cannot take ordinary Quinine. Poes not nauseate nor cause nervousness nor ringing in the head. Try it the next time you need Quinine tor any pur pose. Ask tor b ounce original package. The name FEBK1LINK is blown iubotUe. 2d cents MORE STRENGTH FOR OLD PEOPLE Mrs, Hutchison—Eighty-One Years Old—Uses No Oth er Tonic but Vinol and Rec ommends It to Friends. Greenville, S.C. — “It is with pleasure I tell others of the great benefit I have derived from Vinol, for tho past several years. I am 81 years old and I find Vi nol gives me strength, a healthy appe tite and overcomes nervous disorders. Vinol is the only tonic reconstructor I have used for several years. I have recommended it to a great many of my friends and it has always proved satis factory. Mrs. M. A. Hutchison, Greenville, S. C. Such cases as the above are constantly coming to our attention. If people in this vicinity only realized how Vinol in vigorates old people we would not be able to supply the demand. It is the tissue building, curative ele ments of the cod’s livers, aided by the blood making strengthening properties of tonic iron contained in Vinol, that makes it so successful in building up strength for old people, delicate chil dren and for all run-down conditions. Vinol is also a most successful remedy for chronic coughs, colds and bronchitis. If it fails to benefit any one who tries it we return your money. JOHN R. CATES DRUG CO., Newnan Resolutions of Respect ADOPTED By WOMAN’S MISSIONARY SOCIETY OF THE FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH, NEWNAN, GA.. ON THE HOME-GOING OF MRS. AODIE GORDON VARNER. We, as a society, feel constrained not to let pass the opportunity of ascribing a tribute of love and respect to the memory of our departed sister. She was born in McDonough, Ga., Jan. 8, 1845; united with the Baptist church at Indian Springs, Ga., and was baptized by Rev. Newton Nehemiah Edge on a Sunday afternoon in July, 1870. On Sunday, Oct. 11, 1914, she fell asleep, and the sweet, gentle spirit returned to the God who gave it. How fitting that both her baptism and coronation took place on the day she loved best! “Whoever scatters sunshine enriches human lives.” Her's was a life that was bright, full of sunshine and cheer, and the sweetness of her spirit is with us still. She wanted that her life should be bright with sunshine. Thoughts of life were uppermost in her mind, and she sought life and love that she might have it more abundantly. Her mission was to serve God, and she was filled with the joy of love and service. It was in the places of need where shone brightest her noble spirit, and what she was in the various relations of life they best can tell who knew her most intimately. Her nature was softened and sweetened by the trials of life. One of her favorite passages of scripture was: “Though He slay me, yet will I trust in Him.” She entered the “val ley of the shadow” fearing no evil. Her Savior was with her in the “deep waters,” whence she came forth a spir it redeemed and glorified. Her spirit is with God, who giveth life to the soul. Therefore, be it — Resolved, That with our tenderest sympathies extended, we commend God’s all-sufficient grace to the be reaved family. Mrs. R. F. Milner, Mrs. W. H. Kersey, Mrs. W. B. Orr, Committee. Remarkable Cure of Croup. "Last winter when my little boy had croup I got him a bottle of Chamber lain's Cough Remedy. I honestly be lieve it saved his life.” writes Mrs. J. B. Cook, Indiana, Pa. “It cut the F hlegm and relieved his coughing spells. am most grateful for what this reme dy has done for him.” For sale by all dealers. A traveler visiting a large factory made a bet with the manager that he would pick out all the married men among the employees. Accordingly he stationed himself at the door as they came back from dinner, and mentioned all those whom he believed to be mar ried, and in almost every case he was right. “How do you do it?” asked the man ager, in amazement. “Oh, it’s quite simplp,” said the traveler, “quite simple. The married men all wipe their feet on the mat; the single men don’t.” The most valuable asset of any per son is to have a personality that will dnw people to them and make friends. "My Mamma Says - Its Safe for Children." -s i Cole’s 3-row Oat and Wheat Drill Docs the work of three men and three horses. Plants oats, wheat, rye, barley, peas, peanuts, sorghum or any small grain. We have only a small number of these machines left. Farmers are buying them this season. ’Phone your order in at once. JOHNSON HARDWARE CO. TELEPHONE 81, NEWNAN, GA. ft iTTIIMG The High Cost of Living C, Good groceries and honest weights solve the high cost problem. You get what you pay for here, and you get the best of what you order. My idea is to help you. tL I have the best stock of groceries in town— both in quality and variety. I have the best organized store service in town, and, above all, I have the disposition to please you. C, Fresh fish, oysters and celery every Friday and Saturday S W INT • - _ A' The abeve picture represents a PROSPERITY COLLAR MOULDER, which uses tin 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.3 The'collars last much longer, too. Let us show you. NEWNAN STEAM LAUNDRY 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. T. CARPENTER 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 feed a teaspoonful of— STOCK MEDICINE Bee Dee It will lessen your feed bills. It will Increase your profits. using STOCK MEDICINE with my horses regularly and find it a saving proposition on feed. It also makes them healthy, thriving and dean. Ira Johnston. R. F. D. No. t, O'Neill, Nebr. For Sale By ALL DEALERS 25c, SOc and $1. per can. At your dealer's. P. B. I