The Newnan news. (Newnan, Ga.) 1906-1915, September 28, 1906, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

Improved Rural Life. that as a matter of self-protection the cotton growers must strive to lessen the crop. This is unfortunate, but it is the unanswerable logic of the situ ation. When it comes to the point that the producer is bankrupted lo calise he makes an abundant crop, It is not in the cities that this country now needs the services of the flower of its patriotic man hood: it is in the country where the great national problem of the improvement of the rural life is to Ik* solved, where more lieautiful towns and villages and better roads he has no remedy but to lessen the are to be built, liettor schools to 1m* crop and turn his attention to established, telephones and trolley .something else.—The Cotton Jour- lines constructed and all the in- mil. Huences put to work that will so- ~ — 1 ciali/e the country and drive olf Our Farmers Should Grow a the isolation and hardships that Variety. were its drawl nicks. We must not only stop and re- Almost every crop of value to verse tide of population that has our farmers in stock raising or for 1hk*ii drifting from the country to supplying the markets at home the cities; we must decentralize in- and abroad, can lie raised in the dustry and trade as well as popii- South in ladter (laying quantities y, eru |„ gcarcely such u thing as u DANCING IN VIENNA. The Maaln Neve/ Stops, and People Walt* All the Tlaie. When the ranching is In full and orthodox swing in Vienna, baiy"tnke 'ilui'o every evening in the doie^P or so of big and small halls avuiluble for societies and charities. The favorite hull Is the Sof^nsul. which Is a swim ming bath in summer. For the oc casion it is floored with parquet and decked with palniB. There are always twh when not three bunds, and as soon as one leaves off the other tukes up the waltz. If It does not, the public wants to know the reason why and Immediately begins to demonstrate with linndjpid voice. The chaperons sit nroidfd in solemn state, and tlie men congregate In the middle of tlie floor, forming what is technically called the herren Insel, or men's island. From tills position of vantage they swoop down on any part ner who weakens for a moment and carry her off. There is no such thing uh being engaged for a dance—indeed. lation. The patriotism that is than any part of the country. And latent in every heart must fiml an yet they confine the cultivation outlet In every country town and of farm products to a lew of the village in the work of village im- many that are raised. provement; of creating an envi ronment for human life where the highest utility and beauty will surround the entire community and where a local civic loyalty will prevail that will anchor the peo ple to their own hearthstone and where they will live content under their own vine and tig tree. This local pride and love of home and the home town is one of the strongest human feelings when onco it is deeply planted. It should la* cultivated in every pos sible way. Nothing should la* left dunce, tin* whole evening being one large dance, except for the supper break . At the charity hall or frutinn- heln, for instance, there will he atiout 2,000 present, and as the men are in good training none of them is long without a spin. The crush Is tremendous, of course, which they have a monopoly of all hut the Vienna dancer, iiialo or other, cures little for hard knocks nnd, being To say nothing of cotton, sugar, rice and heavy shipping tobacco,of grown in this country,they should have hogs to sell, instead of the millions of dollars’ worth they an nually buy; instead of paying hun dreds of millions of dollars for bacon, pork and lard, they can raise enough to feed the entire American people; instead of pay ing enormous sums for thou sands upon thousands of horses and mules every year, they can Ik* raised at less cost in the Smith undone to stimulate or cement it. j than anywhere else and enough to Every member of such a comma- supply both the home anti foreign iiity should cultivate a spirit of demand. AII of this has been dem- comrndship and co-operate to ad onstrated time after time, and with vhiicc the general welfare of all. these facts fully understood we go The merchant, the small trades- on making slow progress very man, the country editor, the slowly. When will this slop? church should nil walk together to An\ time the farmers say the that end. Home industry should be encouraged in every possible way. The whole community should co-operate to protect anti stimulate the trade of the town. The home paper should be liber ally patronized. There is no one tiling capable of so fur-reaching re sults for gootl ns the country (tress. (hie of the most fortunate of modern influences lias been the trend of commercial evolution that word.—Mem (ill is News Scimitar. Mrs. Sam Boykin and children, Sam and Elizabeth, are spending the week visiting in Newnan and Atlanta.—Last week’s Carrollton Times. Mr. and Mrs. Will .Mattox, of Newnan, visited at Mr, W. J. Ho gan’s Sunday. Friends of Mr, Mattox are glad of his recovery from his recent illness —Last determined to get around the room, manages to do It somehow or other, though to a stranger the tnsk looks Impossible. There Is not much ceremony about Introductions. Two strange men will come up and with grave politeness In troduce each other to a lady whom neither of them knows. The Indy may please herself, of course, ns to whether she dances with him or not. In any case, (lie acquaintance begins, and often ends, with u turn. It is uot even necessary to tie two. One dancer j sometimes makes hold to approach, nnd with a deep bow lie says that his name Is Nerval and that ho is n lawyer, or something else, and may ho have the honor of a waltz? Since the Idea Is 1 simply to have a partner amt nothing Is further from ills thoughts titan to be uncivil, ho generally gels Ills way. in a I in II like this thuro is little favor, and tin* prettiest and smartest girls are uot Hindi better off than their less at tractive sisters. While the dowagers tiro in splendid robes, the dancing con tingent are, as a rule, ruthyr simply dressed and short skirted, or else they linvo nn arrangement whereby they gather up all their drapery lu one lmud. . so that they may succeed in keeping ber seventieth session Wednesday It on their persons. Nevertheless to- morning, Seitember 19. It was; ward the small hours the durnuge Is the largest opening in the history of the old institution, thee being about one hundred and seventy- j High Class Druggists AND - OTHERS. The better class of druggists, everywhere, are men of scientific attainments and high integrity, who devote their lives to the welfare of their fellow men in supplying the best of remedies an purest medicinal agents of known value, in accordance with physicians’ prescriptions ana scientific formula. Druggists of the better class manufacture many excellent remedies, but always under original or officinal names and they never sell false brands, or imitation medicines. They are the men to deal with when in need of anything in their line, which usually includes all standard remedies and corresponding adjuncts of a first-class pharmacy and. the finest and best of toilet articles and preparations and many useful accessories and remedial appliances. The earning of a fair living, with the satisfaction which ariseB from a knowledge of the benefits conferred upon their patrons and assistance to the medical profession, is usually their greatest reward for long years of study and many hours of daily toil. They all know that Syrup of Figs is an excellent laxative remedy and that it gives universal satisfaction, and therefore they are selling many millions of bottles annually to the well informed purchasers of the choicest remedies, and they always take pleasure in handing out the genuine article bearing the full name of the Company—California Fig Syrup Co.—printed on the front of every package. They know that in cases of colds and headaches attended by biliousness and constipation and of weakness or torpidity of the liver and bowels, arising from irregular habits, indigestion, or over-eating, that there is no other remedy so pleasant, prompt and beneficial in its effects as Syrup of Figs, and they are glad to sell it because it gives universal satisfaction. Owing to the excellence of Syrup of Figs, the universal satisfaction which it giveB and the immense demand for it, imitations have been made, tried and condemned, out there are individual druggists to be found, hero and there, who do not maintain the dignity and principles of the profession and whose greed gets the better of their judgment, and who do not hesitate to recommend and try to sell the imitations in order to make a larger profit. Such preparations sometimes have the name—“ Syrup of Figs”—or “Fig Syrup” and of some piratical concern, or fictitious fig syrup company, printed on the package, but they never have the full name of the Company—California Fig Syrup Co.—printed on the front of the package. The imitations should be rejected because they are injurious to the system. In order to sell the imitations they find it necessary to resort to misrepresentation or deception, and whenever a dealer passes off on a customer a preparation under the name of “Syrup of Figs” or “Fig Syrup,” which does not bear the full name of the California Fig Syrup Co. printed on the front of the package, he is attempting to deceive and mislead the patron who has been so unfortunate as to enter his establishment, whether it be large or small, for if the dealer resorts to misrepresentation and and deception in one case he will do so with other medicinal agents, and in the filling of physicians’ prescriptions, and should be avoided by every one who values health and happiness. Knowing that the great majority of druggists are reliable, we supply the immense demand for our excellent remedy entirely through the druggists, of whom it may be purchased every where, in originnl packages only, at the regular price of fifty cents per bottle, but as exceptions exist it is necessary to inform the public of the facts, in order that all may decline or return any imitation which may be sold to them. If it does not bear the full name of the Company— California Fig Syrup Co,—printed on the front of every package, do not hesitate to return the article and to demand the return of your money, nnd in future go to one of the better class of druggists who will sell you what you wish and the best of everything in his line at reasonable prices. Emory College Opening. Kmory College, Oxford, Ga., Sept. 23 —Emory College begin IftlW has bourne no heavily upon the | weck * 9 Hogansville News country editor by the development of the metropolitan monthjy and mail order papers, tilled with temptation for the rural people to stimulate the centralization of wealth and trade in tin* cities by supplying their ordinary needs from far-distant and practically unknown sources. This trend toward the central ization of trade and industry in the great cities walks side by side of wealth and population as a menace to our national future. The danger it threatens can only Ik* obviated by awakening the peo ple at large to a realization of it — Maxwell’s Talisman. If the idle class of negroes could he induced to go to work as read ily us they can be induced to turn out for third-rate circuses, the problems of this section growing out ot the inability ot farmers and industrial promoters to command labor would be at an end,—Albany Herald. five new students enrolled, besides, a larger number than usual of the old ones. This unusual attend-’ ance me.tns something tor educa-j tion in Georgia and the South. It, is evidence either of great pros Scissorettes. Economy is not parsimony. No one ever wins by merely wishing. Tho Vienna belle may not go to as many balls, perhaps, as ber English sister, but she certainly dunces a good many more kilometers In the course of her season. The Vlonna bnlls begin, us a rule, pretty sharply at 0, and, with an hour or so for supper, tho waltzing goes on till 3. The most en thusiastic will not go away much be fore 3, but the otllcors cannot often stay to the end and when the lleuten- it or of an awakening 0 f the ! ants depart tho glory departs with 1 / , thorn. Six hours, almost without a public conscience along these very | pause, Is a very respectable athletic important lines. Perhaps it may l performance, and many of tbs ladles bea9Crjbef , tf) both> It is a notica . j will nevertheless be seen on the les the next afternoon still waltzing.— able fact that ail our colleges are LoudonGraphic. j full, and some of them running] BloH#rln ~ | over with new life—life that must j Of the etiology of stuttering we know mean so muc t to the coming gen- j nothing definite. Direct Inheritance Is j erations. rare, and possibly imitation la the chief _,. . ... . ,, factor when father and son are affect- Th,s art,cle ,s wrltten especially od. There is usually a well marked 1 to let some of our people Jcnow neurotic Inheritance, others In tho fain- wba [ 0 ld Coweta is doing with her lly having various forms of nervous complaints, But 1 have not been able to confirm Charcot’s statement that A clour conscience is it good euro stuttering and ordinary facial paralysis A Strange Story. Tlut cotton crop of IU05-OU was 2,220,000 bales Niuuller than tho crop of MW-l-05 but itsold for $12,- 000,000 more money. The crop of IPO.’J-iM was J,.'WO,- 000 bales loss than tho crop of tho succeeding year but it onl\ lucked $11,500,000 of bringing as much money as the big crop; according the ones for insomnia. The world owes a debt of grati-1 tilde to its dreamers. The repentent prodigal never criticises the bill of fare. The wage of sin is death anil the “ghost" never fails to walk. A task approached with dread is usually doubtfully performed. A whole lot of men who think they arc independent are merely stubborn. Men who have the easy jobs are who have tackled the frequently occur In tho same family. Shooks, frights nnd debility after some acute Illness are the onuses to which boys and girls. Ever since 1 have been at Emory, this county has been well reptesented. This year Newnan has two representatives, Goodrich White and Hubert Quil- to this statement tlu* cotton grow hard work tirst. ersonly got $11,500,000 for 11,500,- 000 additional bales, or a little more than $11 per bale. t The last three crops have prac- give the insurance company the best of it. Men who have succeeded lR*st as tiddly sold for the same amount, leaders have had long training us as the difference U*tw on the high- followers. cst and tlu* lowest crop was only Heaven would In* a lonesome $24,000,000. The deduction is place if salvation depended on plain. The growers must limit doing instead of trying. ■ their efforts to the production of It is a mistake to think you such amount as can Ik* sold at a draw nearer to God by getting profit. It is absolutely clear that away from your neighbors, a 15,000,000 lialo crop would bank- When you start out to look for rupt the growers. Thus a 10,000,- trouble it is a waste of energy to 000 bale crop costing let us say take a microscope along. $450,000,000) will sell for $000,. Children move in the right di- 000,000, or a profit of $150,000,- rection much more readily when 000. On the other hand a 15,- led than when merely directed. 000,000 bale crop (costing Ictus If the average man were as big say $000,000,000) would sell for as he imagines himself to 1m?, the $450,000,000, ora loss of $150,000,- world would lie awfully crowded. tin* onset is most frequently attributed |j atl . Senoia has two, Emory Dan- by parents. Imitation is undoubtedly „ . , , tel and Walter Carmichael; Grant- ville has three, Robert and Paul Bugg and the writer. Last year two Coweta boys graduated here. Thev were Leonard Neill and W E Henslee. This is saying much for our county, but it is not all, for we have boys and girls in every insti tution in the State. May all this serve to inspire us only the more to forwarding the cause of Chris tian education in the young— education that will fit for real ser vice in the world. Lindsey Whitehead. an occasional cause, children having often been known to start the habit when put lu cbnrge of a stuttering nursemaid. A friend of mine who was extremely fond of horses nnd was hardly to he kept out of the stables ac quired a most obstinate stutter from the groom. Adenoid vegetations are often met with nnd are Important ns a predisposing cause, since they tend to prevent the proper filling of the chest with air. When present they should he removed as a preliminary measure, al though it must not he expected that their removal will lead to a prompt It is a good policy that docs not cessation of the stutter.—London Lan cet. A Wonderful PrudlKf. The king of prodigies died on June 27, 1725, at the age of five, after hav- : lug astonished the whole world. His story Is the most remarkable'In human annals and Is attested by evidence which has satisfied nil the learned in quirers who have written about him. The tufnut. Christian lieinecken, was horn of respectable parents Iti Lubeck, 1721. Andrew Jenkins, Clarence Hollis, practical painters: Don't pay $1.50 a gallon for canned oil. which ought to cost but fit) cents a gallon. Ready-mixed paint is half oil and half paiut. Buy oil fresli from the barrel and add it to the L. & M. Paiut A few hours after his birth he which is semi-mixed, began a conversation, at teu months When you buy L. & M. Paint you get there was scarcely a subject on which a full gallon of paint that won’t wear he could not express au opinion and off for 10 or 15 years, because L. & M. at a year and a month he had mastered Ziuc hardens the L. & M. White Lead both the Old and New Testaments. He Rllc j make s L. & M. Paint wear like iron, was only two and a half when he was 4 L & M . mixed with 3 gal- able to answer questions concerning [om , iu8eed oll will pamt a modemt e The New BARGAIN York STORE, ■on* SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 29th, Will break the record with our great fall opening of the greatest values in fall and winter merchan dise, or clothing and dry goods in the history of our business. Bright and desirable merchandise bought at such low prices until every department is ready with tremendous bargain surprises. An early visit will handsomely profit you. Our prices will plead their own cases. A glance through our store will at once remove all doubt from your mind as to where you can buy the best assortment for the least money. Don’t Forget the Place! New YorK Bargain Store 3* <8* 000. These are facts liorni* out by the evidence. It becomes therefore apparent A whole lot of men w ho pride themselves on their smartness are anything to aucieut and modern his tory. and he was also at this time an expert geographer. He spoke Latin and French, and at the age of four was speaking in the French language at the court of Denmark. AU this time he was being nursed by his moth er. At the age of five tt became nec essary for him to he weaned, and in consequence of this change of diet he The Galleyboy. constantly buying gold bricks of Jled - psychologists an insoln- thvmselves. ble problem.—Westminster Gazette. sized house. Actual cost L. & M. about 11.20 per “ gallon. Oh, tradesman, in thine hour of e e, Sold in the North, East, South and If on this paper yon should c c c, West. Take our advice and now be y y y. C. S. Andrews, Ex-Mayor, Danbury, Go straight ahead and adveit i i i. Conn., writes: "Painted my house 1W You’ll find the project of some u u u; years ago with L. & M. Looks well to- Neglect can offer no ex qq q; ; day.” Sold by Be wise at once, prolong your d a a a ALEXANDER POPE. A silent business soon de k k k. Newnan, Ga. | Loudon Tid-Bits. Notice. Rev. B. D. Gray, D. D., cor. sec. of Home Missions for the Southern Baptist Convention, will speak at the Central Baptist Church at both morning and even ing service on next Sunday. AJ1 are invited to hear him.