About Newnan herald & advertiser. (Newnan, Ga.) 1909-1915 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 8, 1915)
Nature Never Intended Woman to be Sickly III As a matter of fact it is her right and her do.y to enjoy perfect health ard atrength—to he jurt na strong and healthy ns man— perhaps more so—in view of the fnet that it is she who brings into the world the offspring. Every woman can bo strong und healthy. Don’t resign yourself to n delicate life. If you suffer from hcadachec, backache.', nervousness low s|>irits, luck of ambition, or have lost ail hope of being well again it’s more than an oven chance that you will speedily regain your health if you will try Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription — mmmm a— n .«u Turn Vjiir mau ta-Mwa—Tirg.^Tinrwii— (Bn Tablet or Liquid Form) This famous remedy in the result of years of patient research by u physician who baa mad; wam-n’a peculiar uilraonLa a life study, Pmroltp intreS unit on—more than fr.rtv yinr. n^rr I’. in- of fi in i rnjy 'art of ihf* vlolm hnvu in in wondoiTuI merit i. You, too, will find it beneficial, Try it now. Your m uler In inediefn :i will oupply you or you enn ►. ml f/i liu-« int i tninM f ora trial U>«. Add real V.M. 1‘iuri'i, M. IJiiUiilj, N. Y. Dr. Pitre©’* PlaiMit Pdlsitu rcculde utumadi.Hvcr.bo'veli. The Herald and Advertiser NEWNAN, KIRDAY, .IAN. H. ANOTHER YEAH. Another year panned over irono, Hup#* bfAinlnK with tin* new; Thun move w«* fin- -forever on, 'Him many nnd tho few; The miiny nf our childhood’ll duyn Growing fewer, one by one, 'Till dentil. In duel will) ••aril life, Proclalmii the hint in «ono. Another yoar the buried (mat Lion on lln nilont itrow; Tho ntmim of life Howh over on. Ah wnvn li’iio* Into wave; Another year ah! who enn tell Wlmt meniorioN It may brirur Of lonely henrfa nnrl tearful eye, And hope bereft of wlruf? Another year tha curfew rlniM, Fuat cover up each cool; The old year dim. the old year dlon The Ix-I)fi it requiem toll: A i ilirrirn year ban reached i 1 h shrine, The air with incenne rIoww; The Hplrlt of another year Co in oh forth from Ioiik report! Another year, wltli tiara nnd joyH, To form an arch of love; Another y» nr to toil with hope, And Meek for rent above; Another year winded on it* way — Eternity the iroitl; Another year peace In Ita train, Pence to each purlin# ami 11 iThomnii O’11 inrun. Conditions as They Should Be. I). I*. Campbell. FurmerH* Co-operative Anent, A., II. & A. It It . When passing through Virginia on a recent trip 1 was struck witli tho thrif ty looking homes and the large red barns to bo found on every farm. Near each faun house ih a pasture on which something green is growing every month in tilo year, except wiipn the ground is coveri d witli snow, and in these pastures were red pigs and spot ted calves. This was in London county, . Va., a few miles north of Leesburg. 1 expected to see tobacco fields here, like the cotton fields of Georgia. "Why such large burns and so many pigs and calves?" I asked my compan ion, a Georgian, who hud been in Vir ginia for several years. lie replied: "When I came to Virginia it was a tobacco-growing State, and nil the far mers were poor and lived in such houses us you now see traveling along the roads in (be States of the cotton licit; but now each former lias bis water and lights from Ilia own little plant, and many other conveniences that you do not find in any Stale where only one crop is grown. The change came about in this way: Mr. Itruce, cashier of tho Peoples' National Hank, at Leesburg, put an advertisement in the county pa per one day t hut did not rend like the fancy wall calendars that had been is sued annually by that bank. No, sir! It, read: ‘We want to buy well-bred live stock for our farmers, and take their notes for one year, witli no other security than a mortgage on the ani mals they buy, and let these animals out on a contract that they raise stock from same for one year." At the expi ration of the year every farmer was ready to pay Ida note with the amount realized from tho stock raised, and still owned the animals that he started with. ” "How about tho bunk?" I asked; "do ( they have us much on deposit now ns they did before this change came • about?" "At that time Mr. Itruce was the, only employee in the hank, and the president came in on Saturdays and oc casionally during tho week to help him [ keep things straight. Mr. i'.ruce now | has his private office and supervises the work done by several bookkeepers and tellers, and there are now twice as | many hanks in Leesburg 11s there were before the change.” Why don't our local banks start some 1 movement of this kind instead of con- I tinuully asking the farmer when he ' comes to borrow money, "How many acres have you in cotton this year?” The farmer lias agreed, in a farmers’ meeting held recently, that he would not plant any more cotton, iioiv is he to help himself unless he cun borrow the money necessary to run him on something else besides a cotton acre age? I am not antagonizing the banks, but why can’t they loan money on live stock when we have a good market in the Moultrie packing house? There is i one bank in South Georgia that loaned money on eanteloupe acre.go this year, and profited hy so doing. If the banks do not believe this statement let them write to the Eirst National Bank, of Fitzgerald, and verify it. Banks that will loan money for the purpose of raising live stock will find their notes paid more promptly, and their deposits will inctease 100 per cent, inside of three years. Ths Quinine That Doas Not Affsct Tha Head Because of its tonic and laxative eflect. l.AXA- TIVK It ROMO QtUNlNKl* better than ordinary Quinine and does not cause nervousness nor TingiuK in head Remember the full name nnd look lor the sifuatuxe ol R. W. GROVE. 2S:. The Price of Cotton. Hnvnnnnh Now*. Looking at the cotton situation from every point of view only one way pre sents itHelf as promising a better price for cotton, and that is tho reduction of tho cotton acreage next your at least one-half. The various propositions that have boon advanced for aiding the cot ton farmers are all well enough in their way and are to be commended. They show that there is a sympathy with the farmers and that then* is willingness to help them, and all othera whose inter oats are involvi d, but none of them promises relief, none of them justifies an expectation of an increase in the price of cotton. As long as there is a possibility of as great, an ncreago of cotton next year as there was this it is practically impossible to create a de mand sufficient to cause an increase in the price. Of course if the European war should come to an end suddenly the price would advance at once, since there is as much need of cotton fabrics now as there would be if there were no war, but the end of the war isn’t in Bight. Jt looks therefore as if the price ques tion depended wholly upon the reduc tion of next year’s acreage. All our < (Torts therefore should be directed to the s ibition of the problem of the acre age. That is n most difficult problem, and yet isn’t there a way to solve it? The various conferences on tho cotton situa tion that nro being held should gb" their whole attention to it. There will undoubtedly be seine reduction if no special ell'.irts are made in that direc- tien, in cause n considerable per cent, of tiie farmers will cut down their acreage without any urging to do so; hut what is wanted is a certainty within the next few weeks that there will be not more than half the acreage planted next year there was this. \A lth certainty of only a half of a crop next year cotton would advance at once to a jirithat would lie profitable and would insure a big price for cotton next year. Talk nnd resolutions along other lines at confer ences may lie interesting, but it is doubtful if they will bring the results that are desired. Ail agree that crop reduction would give the desired relief. Lifo Insurance Refused. Ever notice how closely life insurance examiners look for symptoms of kidney diseases? They do ho because weakened kidneys lend to in my forinsof dreadful, life-shortening afflictions. If you have any symptoms like pain in the back, fre- quent, scanty or painful action, tired lee ling, aches and pains, get Foley’s Kidney Fills to-day. For snlo by all dealers. True as Preaching. Fltr.irovftld Entcrpriee-Lodircr. Tho meanest tiling that enn happen in a town is when a merchant rufus 's to advertise in his home paper, and then urge the newspaper man to boost the town in order that his business may increase. Some will go so far as to try to rub it in by asking us to condemn 'he mail order houses which are taking nwuy their business by extensive ad vertising. The fact is, these mer chants desire to reap where they sow not, and profit by the labors of others while they are too stingy to give tho local paper an advertisement so the people who buy from the mail order houses may know what they have to t'.dl and at what price. Every mer chant in every town should carry an ad vertisement in the local paper. The de velopment of his town and county de mands it. We do not say this because we are in the newspaper business, but because it is a fact. Biliousness and Constipation Cured. If you are ever troubled with bilious ness or constipation you will be inter ested in the statement of It F. Erwin. Peru, Ind. "A year ago last winter 1 had an attack of indigestion, followed by biliousness and constipation. Seeing Chamberlain’s Tablets so highly recom mended, 1 bought a bottle of them and they helped me right away." For sale by ail dealers. The plain truth of the matter is, it is not money, or money supply, but a normal market for cotton, that is need ed. There is an abundance of avail able money with which to do business. The Treasury reports, the clearing house reports, and the statements of the banks, all show this, and there is no trouble about paying for cotton as fast as it is sold; but nobody wants to buy cotton nor advance money on cot ton under present c< r.ditions at any thing like whBt it cost the farmer to produce it.—Albany Herald. How to Kill a Preacher. Church Bulletin, Sweetwater, Texas. Tne following rules, if carefully fol lowed, will kill any preacher on earth. Kill his influence, kill his ambition, kill him mentally, morally ttrd physically: 1. Slay away from church, especially on bad days, when you think the crowd will bo hmsll. 2. Stay away from the Wednesday night prayer bi rvice, because you know there will bo only a handful present. 3. When the sermon is over, leave the church in h. hurry without speaking to the preacher a word of encourage ment. 4. When you got sick, don't let him know about it, and then abuse him for not coming to see you. fi. Never invite hirn or his family out to dine in your home. They never en joy a social hour. 0. Fay just as little as you can on his salary, and then grumble about that. This makes him feel good. 7. Never give him anything except what you promised. This might make him think you appreciated him. 8. Always have some fool excuse when he wants you to do a little church work. That’s what you pay him for. 9. Never offer to take him out in your auto or lend him your horse and buggy. This would be too kind. 10. Never call at his home, but raise old “Hilly Cain” because he does not visit you once or twice a month. 11. Don’t ever offer to help him in any way, for be might think you were "butting in." 12. Act as cold and indifferent toward him as you can, and he will think you are dignified. If these twelve doses fail to kill him, they will undoubtedly break him from preaching and force him to leave town. Are you killing a preacher? Ellicott H. Worthington, treasurer of the Munsey Trust Company, Baltimore, says: "It is our belief that the newspaper is the very best possible medium for bringing the attention of the public to the facilities a bank has to offer. "It is no more undignified for a bank to tell the public of the facilities it. has to offer than it is for a merchant to ad vertise his wares, hu' of course sensa tionalism in hank advertising should be carefully avoided. "We feel that the most effective ad vertisements are those that are based on broad banking principles, but. which, at the same time, tin the render to the one paying for the space. “Oilier mediums are no doubt, excel lent, but when a bank’s advertising ap- propriation is limited we believe in con centrating on newspaper advertising.” Demand for the Efficient. Alert, keen, clear-headed, healthy men and women are in demand al ways. Modern business cannot use in office, factory or on the road persons who ere dull, lifeless, inert, h ilf-sick or tired. Keep in trim. Be in a condition that wards off disease. Foley’s Cathar tic Tablets clean the system, keep the stomach sweet, liver active and the bowels regular. For sale by all dealers. Walter D tmtosch said the other day in New York: "Kreisler, the Austrian violinist, has been wounded in the arm, and it may lie that he’ll never play again. "To use Kreisler as a stop for bullets seems to me n blasphemy to the art of music—a worse blasphemy than the English countess used toward Paderew ski. "At grout English country house a countess said to Paderewski one rainy afternoon: “ ‘Oh, Mr. Paderewski, you play, don’t you?” " 'Yes, madam,’ the master replied. " ‘Then,’ said the countess, 'would you mind turning my daughter’s mu sic?’ ” Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy—The Mother’s Favorite. "I give Chamberlain’s Cough Rem edy to my children when they have colds or cough,” writes Mrs. Verne Shaffer, Vandergrift, Pa. "It always helps them and is far superior to any other cough medicine 1 have used, l advise anyone in need of such a medi cine to give it u trial.” For sale by all dealers. Here is one deserving of notice. The smull daughter of a Little Rock family had been praying each evening at bed time for a hab.v sister. The other morning her mother, reading the paper, exclaimed: "I see Mrs. Smith has a little daughter. ” "How do you know that?" asked the child. “1 read it in the paper.” "Read it to me." The mother read: "Born, on March —, to Mr. and Mrs. Smith, a daugh ter.” The child thought a moment, then said: "I know what I am going to do. I am going to quit praying and begin ad vertising.” A New England school teacher reci ted "The Landing of the Pilgrims” to her pupils and then asked each of them to draw from their imagination a pic ture of Plymouth Rock. One little fel low hesitated and then raised his hand "Well, Willie, what is it?” asked his teacher. "Please, teacher, do you want us to draw a hen or a rooster?” Caret Old Saras, Other Remedies Won't Cure The ^or$t cases, no matter of bow lone standing, err cured by the wonderful, old reliable Dr. Porter’* Antiseptic Healing Oil. It relieve* 1’ain and Heals At the same time. 25c, 50c. $L0Q. Cole’s 3-row Oat sod lies! Bril “I Never Spent Any Money That Did Me So Much Good as That I Spent for Vinol.” E'llofo’itains.Ohio.—"I yvish every tired, weak, nervous woman could have Vinol for I never spent any money in my life that did me so much good as that I 3pent for Vinol. My nerves were in a very had condition, making me very weak, tir"d, and worn out and often drowsy headaches. I had tried cod liver oil, doctor’s medicines, and other preparations without benefit. “One day a friend asked mo to try Vinol. I did und soon my appetite in creased, I slept better and now I am strong, vigorous and well and can do my housework with pleasure. ’’ — Mrs. J. F. Lam born, Bolleiontaine, Ohio. Nervous, weak, tired, worn-out wo men should take Mrs. Lnmbom’s advice and try Vinol for there are literally thousands of men end women who were formerly run-down, weak and nervous, who owe their good health to Vinok It is the medicinal, tissue building ele ments of the cod’s livers, aided by the blood making, strengthening influence of tonic iron, contained in Vinol, which makes it so efficient in all such cases, ■JOHN It. CATES DRUG CO., Newnan Resolutions by Bethlehem Baptist Church. Our Heavenly Father has seen best to call our brother, M. A, Jones, to his final rest. On Oct. 16, 1914, his spirit took its flight from this sir.-cursed world to ii a eternal home, tie was (51 years of age. Ho joined Yellow Dirt Baptist church thirty years ago, and united with Bethlehem church about ten years later. He had been in fail ing health for a year or more, though confined t > his bed but one week with typhoid fever. He bore his sufferings pati-ntly. He will he missed in the church and community, and most of all will he be missed hy his aged wife. It was a pleasure for him to read his bible to his friends when they would drop in to see him, and when we were his close neighbors often at night he would join us in prayer. In the church he was over ready to speak a word for his Master. Besides his wife, he leaves three sons and one sister, Mrs. Ida Milner. A daughter, Mrs. J. Id. Evans, preceded him to the grave four years ago. Resolved, That we bow in humble submission to tho will of Him whodoeth all things well. Resolved, That a copy of this memo rial he spread upon tho minutes of the church, and also furnished The Herald and Advertiser for publication. Mrs. P. R. Fry, Lee Brooks, Otis Jackson, Committee. How To Givo Quinine To Children. rrnKIUNR is the trade-mark np.me given to nn •'-.mproved Quinine. Itis nTasteks* Syrup, plens- .mt to take and docs not disturb the stomach. Children tai-e it and iu-vi-.r know it is Quinine. Ai-<> espjeciitlly adapted to mhdtu who canu t tube ordinary Quinine. Does not nnusente nor cause nervousness norrin^imr in the head. Try it t!;o next time you need Quinine for any pur pose. Ask for 2• ounce original*pnekogre. The tiHjtte FA>BRII,1N i\ is blown in bottle. 25 cents. Is man tha child of sorrow, and do afflictions and distress pour their bit terness into his cup? How are his trials alleviated, his sighs suppressed and his corroding thoughts dissipated by a wife of cheerfulness and love! Is he overwhelmed hy disappointment and mortified hy reproaches? There is one who can hide her eyes even from his faults, and who, like ourFather in heav en, can forgive and love “without up braiding.” And when he is sickened by thg subtleties and deceptions of the world — when he becomes dissatisfied with himself and all around him—her pleas ant smile, her undissembled tender ness, her artless simplicity, “restore him to himself, and spread serenity and sweetness over his mind.” Stop Buying Expensive Gough Remedies Make the Best at Heme Money scent for the old style, ready made cough syrups in bottles holding only 2 to 2X ounces is very largely wasted, hecattse most of them are com posed principally of sugar and water. Yet you have to pay the same price as if it was all medicine. Stop wasting this money. You can make a better cough medicine at home at one-fifth the cost. Merely go to John R. Cates Drug Co.'s and ask for 2 ounces (50c. worth) of SchilTmann's Concentrated Expectorant. Mix this with one pint of granulated sugar ard one-half pint of boiling water, which makes a full pint, (16 ounces). This new, simple, pleasant remedy is guaranteed to re lieve the worst cough or cold. Also excellent for Bronchial Asthma, Bron chitis. croup hoarseness and whooping cough. One bottle will make enough home-made cough medicine to probably last the whole family the entire winter. Children line it, it is so pleasant to take, and it positively contains no chlo roform, opium, morphine or other nar cotics, as do most cough mixtures. Keep it on hand in case of emergency and stop each cough before it gets a firm hold. The nbove druggist has been au thorized to return the money in every single case where it does not give per fect satisfaction or is not found the best remedy ever used. Absolutely no risk is run in buying this remedy un der this positive guarantee. Does the work of three nicit and three horses. Plants oats, wheat, rye, barley, peas, peanuts, sorghum or any small griau. 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. OZ8IE3E!EmS3ffi!BF^'SE^W^Vr-: 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. Dotrnit. ull cars fully cquipiod. (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 $40 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 NEWNAN GARAGE. 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-dow n collars can have no rough edges, and they also have extra tie space. (' The collars last much longer, too. Let us show you. NEWNAN STEAM LAUNDRY BUGGIES! BUGGIES! f $ 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 CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RAILWAY OO. CURRENT SCHEDULES. ARRIVE from Griffin 11:10a.m. 7:17 p.m. Chattanooga 1:40 p. m. Cedartown 6:39 ▲. m. Columbus . . 9 ;05 a m. 6:85 P. M. DEPARTFUR Griffin 1:40 P. M. Griffin 6:39 a. M. Chattanooga 11 :i0 a. m . C«dartowii 7:17 p. m Columbus 7:40 a.m. 8:15 pm DR.KI Wb EasscOVTK! ft HI Surely Stoo That Cowifc. Oir.King’s Mew LsSe PJIBn The best in the world.