Newspaper Page Text
Weak Women!
Some women arc weak because of ills that are common
In Girlhood—Womanhood
and Motherhood
The prescription which l)r. R. V. Pierce used most successfully-in
diseases of women—which has stood the test of nearly halt a century is
Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription
Take this in liquid or tablet form as a tonic and regulator 1
Mr*. Kate I). Rirhardwn. r,f Bcar’fv. K
!
some years I suffered orcatiy witli wi.ai
ncvcrai physicians but tfiauuiilly grew wo;
remits rif yom "Favorite l*n-scripti<»n. t
and ..ft r taking It. with the ‘Pk-asant
knew what h ipplne** war., lor
.vt Co., Va.. *"I esteem It a pleasure to
.f I Jr. Pierce s Fsvonlc* Prescription. For
nr > peculiar to my r.u:c. I xsas heated by
Oie of my friend told me of thegoo.1
I w«!)’. to the dru i tore ar.»l 1 ot a bottle,
in.1111 . diets, 1 commenn I to get bettor. I never
. i-, always sick and complaining anu niuJe others as
youi“
L’i, I'H I ** -— -
well myself unhappy. So you sec what a debt t owe
Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets regulate stomach, liver, bowels
I'he Herald and Advertiser Trouble Brewing for Entire World
■ • ■ ■- ■ '■ Memphis NnwB-Scimitar.
I HD AY, NOV. 27. Ah if there was not enough blood be-
NEWNAN,
, L It I 0 II T IN T II F. E N IJ.
I want to believe In fh" hnppy old way
That nil will coma right in the end some day—
That life will Ik* bolter and duy« will be sweet.
That rof»e« will carpet the world for men’s feet;
That love and affection and honor and trust
Will lift us from sorrow and shadow and dust.
f want to go toiling with this in my heart.
That every day brings u* the joy of a start
Fresh with endeavor and duty and truth.
As we sw ing to our tasks with t he vigor of youth
Singing the music of love and of cheer,
Till clouds drift apart arid the storms disappear.
I want to go trusting that this will be so
Ah out to tho foil and tumult we go;
That hearts will be kinder and life will grow
bright
With the blessing of labor that leads to the light;
That I roubles, lik* bubbles, will burst and away.
And all will come right in the end Rome day.
Warehouses For Grain.
Macon Telegraph.
Since The Telegraph started the agi
tation of warehouses for grain and cold
storage plants for taking care of the
farmers' meats, the subjects have been
discussed all over the Slate. The agi
tation has resulted in securing a market
here in Macon for all of the corn, oats,
wheat, hay and other crops of that kind
that can he planted. There will also be
an abattoir and cold storage plant for
curing meals und for giving n regular
cash market for all of the meats that
can he raised in this section.
These movements ought to bo fol
lowed in every county in Georgia. There
is little encouragement to a farmer to try
and raise grain or meats unless he can
get a cash market for his product. He
is forced by the very nature of the case
to lose his independence as a farmer
and to become a slave to king cotton—
a monarch who proves a very hard
muster in times when the farmers need
something to lean upon.
The fnrmors are sometimes discour
aged in raising grain crops by the fabu
lous storages which they hear about the
production in the West. They get the
idea that because they cannot produce
as much corn or wheat on their broad
fields iih the Western farmer grows
upon his small farm it will not pay
them to raise corn. They believe that \ troops to Egypt, hut it was found
it would he better to raise cotton and , lh(, y were disposed to be mutinous and
buy corn, forgetting that such a policy ! wert * sent home. Canadian troops,
freshly arrived, were substituted for
I them.
ing shed already, there are signs that
1 the present European war is destined
to reach over vast sweeps of the earth’s
surface, where it has not yet manifested
itself. Whoever was the cause of this
war, or whoever must in the final anal
ysis hear the burden of the blame, is
sure to rest under a mountain of oblo
quy throughout all time.
As much as Macauley admired Fred
erick the Great, he condemned him in
unmeasured terms, because “in order
that he might rob a neighbor, whom he
had promised to defend, black men
fought on the coast of Coromandel, and
red men scalped each other by the great
lakes of North America.” The waste
of human life is appalling, but the ma
terial waste of the world’s wealth i3
unprecedented. The productive ener
gies of civilization cannot long sustain
this terrible waste, and the combatants
must cease lighting from sheer force of
exhaustion. Hut before the end comes
war will smear many countries with its
bloody hands. Europe is a slaughter
pen, and in far-off Cathay the guns are
booming and the blood is flowing. The
Boers in South Africa, remembering
how their country was taken from
them, and smarting'under the memory
of the wrongs which they suffered, have
risen in distressing numbers, and are
now fighting among themselves. Wheth
er the loyalists will be able to put down
the rebellion without outside assistance
is considered problematical. In the re
mote and little known Congo country
they are fighting just as they are around
Ostend and along the lines that divide
the warring forces in France.
India in many places is becoming rest
less, and if these people are seized by a
religious frenzy and inaugurate a so-
callcd holy war, it will bo a bloody one
and one long drawn out. A significant
incident occurred a few weeks ago
which shows tho prevailing sentiment
of that country. The British govern
ment sent a lirge detachment of Indian
that
Cotton in 1861.
New York Pott.
However the extraordinary situation
in our cotton trade is worked out, it is
calling attention now to another sensa
tional chapter in our cotton trade histo-
; ry, which presents a curious combina
tion of contrast and resemblances to
, the present position, In 'his one re
spect the problem of the Southern
! planter in 1SR1 was identical with his
1 problem of 1914— that the outside mnr-
i kel for his product was in large degree
cut off.
The attitude of the South itself was,
however, widely different on the two
occasions. It was as convinced in April,
1861, that the outside world would have
to buy its cotton as the Western far
mers of this season were convinced
that Europe would hav-- to buy our
wheat. American cotton was consid
ered a necessity of Europe's life. Eu
rope would get it, and cotton would
finance the war. So positive was this
belief that the Confederate government
itself began hv forbidding any ship
ment of its own cotton to the Northern
States.
We know what happened. The Fed
eral government blockaded the South
ern ports. Europe had to do without.
At once the Southern planter was in a
similar position to that which she occu
pies to-day, but which, in 1861 and the
three succeeding years, was in reality
vastly worse. Relief measures were in
troduced by thp Confederacy; but they
consisted only of buying cotton from
the planters with irredeemable paper
money, and the pledging of that cotton
for a foreign loan to which some trust
ing Englishmen subscribed. A commit
tee with power to agitate for the pay
ment of that loan is still in nominal ex
istence at London.
The outcome was peculiar. On the
New York market cotton's price had
advanced by 1864 to $1.90 per pound, or
nearly twenty times the average price
of recent years. But in Central Geor
gia, Alabama and South Carolina, it is
safe to say that a planter could not
then have sold his cotton, even for the
low prices that have prevailed in the
South for the past few weeks. Nobody
knows what was the cotton production
of the South in the Civil War; the prob
ability is, that the planters turned in a
body to raising corn, which, at least,
they could themselves consume.
Not the least striking sequel came
when the war was over and the embar
go raised. There was no sudden rush
into cotton-growing, to make good the
four-year shortage. It was five years
after Lee’s surrender before the coun
try’s total cotton crop came within a
million hales of the crops of 1859 and
1860.
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 vour throat;
you feel better at once. Every user is
a friend. For sale by all dealers.
WHEN 1HE TIRED
MOTHER GIVES OUT
What Then?—The Family Suf
fers, the Poor Mothers Suf
fer—Mrs. Becker Meets
This Distressing Situation.
Collinsville, Ill. —“I suffered from a
nervous break-down and terrible head
aches, and was tired all over, totally
worn out and too discouraged to enjoy
life, but as I had four in family and
sometimes eight or nine hoarders, I kept
on working despite my suffering.
“ I saw Vino) advertised and decided
to try it, and within two weeks I
noticed a decided improvement in my
condition and now I am a well woman.”
—Mrs. Ana Becker, Collinsville, Ill.
There are hundreds of nervous, run
down, overworked women in this vicinity
who are hardly able to drag around and
who we are sure would be wonderfully
benefited by Vinol as Mrs. Becker was.
The reason Vinol is so successful in
building up health and strength in such
cases is because it combines the medici
nal tissue building and curative elements
of cod’s livers together with the blood
making, strengthening properties of
tonic iron. We ask every weak, ner
vous, run-down man or woman in this
vicinity to try a bottle of Vinol on our
guarantee to return their money if it
fails to benefit.
JOHN R. CATES DRUG CO., Newnan
has the effect of depressing the price of
their cotton, injuring their land and de
stroying their own agricultural inde
pendence.
If the Southern farmer would only
remember tho big expense which tho
Western grain grower has in harve ling
his crop, he would realize that the lar
ger yield in that section hardly makes
the profits of the farmer more than the
lighter yield in Georgia would give.
Every effort possible known to Ma
chiavellian diplomacy is being used in
order to force Italy to take a hand in
the present conflict, and, in order to pre
serve tho monarchy, it is not unlikely
that the government will have to yield
in order to prevent the establishment
of a republic. Portugal, though small,
may yet bo induced to act its part, and
The time has never been that college t ^e Greeks, that are now active in Al-
students, teachers, preachers and other ^ >un ' a > may also be drawn into the lar-
profesaional men hud to be drafted to' K er conflict. Turkey has risked her
j fate with Germany and Austria, and
gather the crops in tho South. The la
bor problem never reaches that point,
because our diversified interests give
labor employment the year 'round. In
the West it costs much more to pro-
awakening China may yet throw her
millions into the fray I
Neutrality on the part of the Ameri
can continent is imperative, because we
duco grain than in the South, und still called upon to feed and clothe
more to gather it and get it on the ^’ e wor ld. We can do this only for a
market. 1 dine, because as soon as the warring
They have the grain elevators which
give their grain crops u ready cash
value. With warehouses in the South
to handle the farmers’ grain, there
would be more inducement for the far
mers to grow other crops than cotton.
They would be encouraged to follow the
example of the corn club boys and get
greater returns from each acre planted.
In all of the important towns of Geor-
world becomes bankrupt and unable to
pay us we will cease sending them our
surplus products. The times are most
unpropitious und fateful, and not even
clairvoyaney can see far ahead and say
what is in store for us.
Foley's Cathartic Tablets
Are wholesome, thoroughly cleansing,
and have a stimulating effect on the
stomach, liver und bowels. Regulate
gia there ought to be provided ex- you wit i no griping and no unpleasant
. . ~ I nnnntA <Tn/T
changes or warehouses whore the far
mers’ grain crops could be converted
into cuHh.
The Georgia Chamber of Commerce
can do no better work than to encour
age enterprises of this kind.
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 tho thick
mucous, clears away the phlegm and
•mens up and eases the air passages.
For sale by all dealers.
A humane man is comfortable when
his stock is comfortable, and when they
are ill at ease he is in the same condi
tion.
after effects. Stout people find they
give immense relief und comfort. Anti
bilious. For sale by all dealers.
“don’t mess
do you sure
"Nigger,” warned one,
wid me, ’cause when you
is flirtin’ wid d’ hearse.”
"Don’t pesticate wid me, nigger,”
replied the other, shaking his fist;
” 'cause if you does I’ll hit yo' so ha'd I’ll
separate yo’ ideas from yo' habits: I’ll
jes’ knock you fum amazin’ grace to a
floatin' opportunity.”
"If you mess wid me, nigger,” con
tinued the other, “I’ll jes’ make one
pass an’ dere’ll be a men puttin' yo’
in de face wid a spade to-morrow
mornin’.”
■ i — — 1
When the oldest daughter marries
the rest of the family manage to get
along comfortably without a boss.
How To Give Quinine To Children.
FRBRtUKRU the trade-mark name given to an
improved Quinine. It is a Tameless Syrup, pleas-
equally valuable as a : to snjdoes uot disturb the stomach.
. 1 J ,. , . _ , Children take it and never know it is Quinine.
because it contains the j aIm> especially adapted to adults who cannot
take ordinary Quinine. Does not nauseate nor
cause nervousness nor ringing in the head. Try
it the next time you need Quinine for any pur
pose. Ask for 2-ounce original package. The
name FEUK1L1NE is blown in bottle. cents.
Whenever You Need n General Tonic
Take Grove's
The Old Standard Grove’s Tasteless
chill Tonic is
General Tonic
well known tonic proper!lesofQUlN'INE
and IRON. It acts on the Liver, Drives
out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and
Builds up the Whole System. 50 ceuts.
A Prolonged Struggle Seems to
Be Inevitable.
Not a more depressing note has been
sounded in connection with the great;
war than the announcement, made in
all seriousness, that Great Britain will
not be ready to play its part in the
terrible drama until 1915. What does
this mean? It means that it is the
authoritative view of England that the
terrible conflict is only in its early
stages, and the winter must pass be
fore Great Britain will have its troops
in readiness to do their share of the
battling. This is discouraging news to
those who cherished the hope that the
war might be of no great duration. It
means that England, at least, looking
forward to a struggle drawn out
through months, possibly through
years, and sees in the shuddering loss
of life and destruction of property al
ready paid as war toll, only the opening
chapter of the ghastly story.
Yet to what other condition could
thoughtful and intelligent study of the
situation arrive? The war is approach
ing the end of the third month, and ab
solutely nothing decisive has been ac
complished on either side. Out of the
mist of conflicting and irreconcilable re
ports and claims, that much is certain.
Many thousands of lives have been
drained and millions of dollars worth of
property has been laid in ruins, without
any distanct advantage to either side.
Not one of the warring nations could
think of peace in these circumstances.
Until financial and physical exhaustion
manifests itself, death and destruction
must continue their work.
The theory that the war would be
shortened by the effectiveness of mod
ern means of dealing death has been
dismissed. The effectiveness of the
cost in humanity is m deterrent. The
price in lives is paid and the debt runs
on. The certainty that both sides suf
fer beyond computation in men and
property, and that the loser will face a
staggering bill of costs, has the effect
only to stimulate both to greater ex
ertion. It is a battle to the death—
to national death, perchance—and there
seems little hope of escape from either
its long duration or its horrible con
sequences.
No one can rise above that at which
he aims.
Is This War to See the End of
Mystic Christianity?
Three hundred thousand church
spires raised to the glory of Christ!
Thr *e hundred million human creatures
baptized into his service! And war-
war to death of them all! ”1 trust the
Almighty to give the victory to my
arms!” "Let your hearts beat to God,
and ynur fists in the face of the
enemy!” “In prayer we call God’s
blessing on our valiant troops!”
God on the lips of each potentate,
and under the hundred thousand spires
prayer that twenty-two million servants
of Christ may receive from God the
blessed strength to tear and blow each
other to pieces, to ravage and burn, to
wrench husbands from wives, fathers
from their children, to starve the poor,
and everywhere destroy the works of
the spirit! Prayer under the hundred
thousand spires for the blessed strength
of God, to use the noblest, most ioyal
instincts of the human race to the ends
of carnage! “God be with us to the
death and dishonor of our foes,’’(whose
God he is no less than ours!) The God
who gave his only begotten Son to
bring on earth peace and good will to
ward men!
No creed—in these days when two and
two are put together—can stand against
such reeking subversion of its founda
tions. After this monstrous mockery,
beneath this grinning skull of irony,
how shall there remain faith in a re
ligion preached and practiced to such
ends? When this war is over and rea
son resumes its s«.ay our dogmas will
be found to have been scored through
forever. Whatever else be the out
come of the business, let us at least
realize the truth: It is the death of
mystic Christianity! Let us will that
it be the birth of an ethic Christianity
that men really praise!
Best Cough Medicine for Children.
“Three years ago when I was living
in Pittsburg one of my children had a
hard cold and coughed dreadfully. Upon
the advice of a druggist I purchased a
bottle of Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy
and it benefited him at once. I find it
the best cough medicine for children
because it is pleasant to take. They
do not object to taking it,” writes Mrs.
LaFayette Tuck, Homer City, Pa. This
remedy cor tains no opium or other nar
cotic, and may be given to a child as
confidently as to an adult. Sold by all
dealers.
Her friends had asked their young
hostess to play for them, and she was
performing a difficult selection from
Wagner. In the midst of it she sud
denly stopped in confusion.
“What’s the matter?” asked one of
the visitors.
“I—I struck a false note,” faltered
the performer.
“Well, what of it?” cried another
guest. “Go ahead. Nobody but
Wagner would ever know it, and he’s
dead.”
An old farmer was laboriously filling
out a claim sheet against a railroad
company that had killed one of h ; s
cows. He came down to the last item,
which was “Disposition of carcass.”
After puzzling over it for a while he
wrote; “Kind and gentle.”
Cores Old Sores, Ollier Rimediei Won't Con
The vorst cases, no mailer of how long standing,
are cured by the wonderful, old reliable Dr.
Porter’s Antisentic Healing Oil. It relieve*
Paui and ileal* at the aamc time. 50c, 4L00.
.*fOLEY
KIDNEY
PILLS
Note These
Points
Interesting to men and
women having Kidney
and Bladder troubles
That Foley Kidney Pills are suc
cessful everywhere with all-kidney
and bladder trouble*, backache,
weak back, rheumatism, (tiff and
aching joint*, because they are a
true medicine, honestly made, that
you cannot take into your system
without having good results.
They make your kidneys strong
and healthily active, they regulate
the bladder. Tonic in action, quick
in giving good results. Try them.
For Sale By ALL DEALERS
Does 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.
Reduction of Fords
Buyers to Share in Profits
Lower prices on Ford cars effective from Aug. 1,
1914, to Aug. 1, 1915, and guaranteed against any
reduction during that time:
Touring'Car $490
Runabout 440
Town Car 690
. F. O. B. Detroit, all cars fully equipped.
(In the United States of America only.)
Further, we will be able to obtain the maximum efficiency in
our factory production, and the minimum cost in our pur
chasing and sales departments if we can reach an output of
300,000 cars between the above dates.
And should we reach this production, we agree to pay as the
buyer’s share from S40 to $60 per car (on or about Aug. 1,
1915,) to every retail buyer who purchases a new Ford car
between Aug. 1, 1914, and Aug. 1, 1915.
For further particulars regarding these low prices and profit-
sharing plan, see the
NLWNAN GARAQL
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. S.The[collars last much longer, too. Let us show you.
NEWNAN STEAM LAUNDRY
*
ft
ft
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
i’X&xxxtkx&x
ft
s
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RAILWAY CO.
CURRENT SCHEDULES.
ARRIVE FROM
Griffin 11;10a.m. 7:17 p.m.
Chattanooga 1:40 p. m.
Cedartown 6:39 A. m.
Columbus 9:05 a m. 6:35 p.m.
DEPART FOR
Griffin 1:40 p. M.
Griffin 6:39 a.m.
Chattanooga 11:10 a. m.
Cedartown 7:17 p. M.
Columbus 7:40 a. M. 6:15P-
DR.MNG’S ftEW ©SSCCVtRTJ
Wtf Surely Stoo That Couah.
Dr.King’s New LifePUlu
The best in the world.