The Newnan herald. (Newnan, Ga.) 1915-1947, February 05, 1915, Image 1

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THE NEW NAN HERALD NEWNAN HERALD ' Consolidated with Coweta Advertiser September, 1 Established 1866. I Consolidated with Nownnn News January. 191"). - NEWNAN, GA.. FRIDAY. FEBRUARY, 5 1915. Vol. 50—No. 19 SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT An Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday * a Feb 10 Feb 11 Feb 12 Feb 12 Feb. 11 Feb. 12 Feb. 13 Sc Moss Bros. & Co., of Baltimore and IMew York WILL HOLD THEIR SEMI-ANNUAL TAILORING DISPLAY IN OUR STORE, AND YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED F OLLOWING OUR CUSTOM, we shall hold here, on the above-mentioned date, our semi-annual display of line Custom-Tailoring woolens, which will be in charge of one of their representatives, who will show you the new styles in materials and models for the coming season. Talk to him and get his ideas. No obligation to buy if you don’t want to. This Schloss Tailoring Opening has come to be an event looked forward to by the best dressed men of this section. It brings to you the facilities ordinarily available only to those who live in New York or other large cities;—the chance to know “what’s what” in metropolitan fashion, and to get it at reasonable cost. Remember, this is high-class Custom-Tailoring, backed by a house of 40 years’ reputation. Fine Made-to-Measure work that would ordinarily cost from $>0 to $90, for half that. We Shall Look Forward to Seeing You P. F. CUTTINO & COMPANY CALOMEL WHEN BILIOUS? NO! STOP! MAKES YOU SICK AND SALIVATES "Dodson's Liver Tone" is Harmless Clean Your Sluggish Liver and Bowels. Ugh! Calomel makes you sick. It’s 'horrible! Take a dose of the dangerous .drug tonight and tomorrow you may lose a day’s work. Calomel is mercury or quicksilver which causes necrosis of the bones. Calomel, when it comes into contact with sour bile crashes into it, breaking it up. This is when you feel that awful nausea and cramping. If you are slug gish and “all knocked out,” if your liver is torpid and bowels constipated or you have headache, dizziness, coated tongue, if breath is bad or stomach sour, just try a spoonful of harmless Dodson’s Liver Tone tonight on my guarantee. Here’s my guarantee—Go to any drug store and get a 50 cent bottle of Dod son’s Liver Tone. Take a spoonful and if it doesn’t straighten you right up and make you feel fine and vigorous I want you to go back to the store and get your money. Dodson’s Liver Tone is destroying the sale of calomel because it is real liver medicine; entirely vege table, therefore it can not salivate or make you sick. I guarantee that one spoonful of Dod son’s Liver Tone will put your sluggish liver to work and clean vour bowels of that sour bile and constipated waste which is clogging your system and imik- ing you feel miserable. I guarantee that a bottle of Dodson’s Liver Tone will keep your entire family feeling line for months. Give it to your children. It is harmless: doesn’t gripe and they like its pleasant taste. THE LAND OF BOHEMIA. Oh! mythical land of the Heart’s Desire, Of laughter and love and son*?— Where only a ripple of care now and then Troubles the vision with “Mltfht have been,” Where never a day is Ion*. And the nights are a revel of music. And sadness is put to shame; Where fair youth and a«e are comrades at last. Each running the gamut of pleasure fast, (The old. old moth and flame!) Where Wisdom and Folly touch hands and smile O’er Fellowship’s common tie. Where Plenty and Want are keeping the pace. Together, with ever a merry face— For the day-dreams never die!. Land “where judge not and neither condemn” Is one of thy sacred laws: Where those who huve slipped on the gilded ways Are welcome to sit by the man who prays— Ah. almost I plead thy cause! — Jo. Hartman. Posterity Pays. Dr. C. W, Saleoby. in Youth's Companion. There is a price of war that is more important, more dreadful, more unjust, and that takes far longer to pay than any other, and it is a price also that has to he paid in the only wealth, which is life. The mere question as to who wins the war has nothing to do with it. The questions who was right or wrong, who began it, who gained or lost territory, who paid tribute to whom peace was declared, how the taxes rose and fell, which industries prospered or which decayed—all these questions are m-gli gible when compared witli the longest price of war, which all fighting nations have paid and must pay. All the prices of war fall most heav ily upon the future. Great Britain still pays heavy taxes every year for the Boer War and other wars of the past, right and wrong, glorious and in glorious. But the longest price of war is wholly paid by future generations, and hurts the future only. Toe people who will live in the years to come get none | of the glory for which rulers now wage war; they are at the mercy of the past, I which did not consult them, but wti:h makes them pay. Tnere is a fact of life calle J herelity, which plays a dreadful part in deter mining the longest price of war. Ac- ; cording to the I iws of heredity, we are Jail largely dependent upon what our I ancestors were for what we can be; consequently, the future of any race depends upon the quality of those who become its fathers and mothers. - That is true no! oily of human beings, but of all living things. Some have found in this theory an argument for war; they maintain since life advances by struggle and survival, strong nations must crush weak ones if the future of mankind is to be strong. None of the champions of war who de clare that peace corrodes and ruins na tions have thought about the matter deeply enough to learn that the argu ment they quote is the moBt fatal of all to their own horrible creed. For the truth is that war brings about “re versed selection”—in which the best are chosen to be killed, and the worst are preserved to become the fathers of the future. Rome and France furnish illustrations of this awful truth. The greatest em pire of the ancient world was Rome. When she had conquered all her enemies she fell. Ever Hince then thinkers and historians have sought the reason. To day there are many who believe that it has been found. Rome was always fighting. She had far and wide fron tiers, which must ever be defended. The defense needed the b st m m she had, and got them. A great German historian, Professor Seek, says that in Rome, out of every hundred thou land strong men, eighty thousand were slain, and that out of every hundred thousand weaklings ninety to ninety five thous and were left to survive. The Roman Empire perished for want of men, says the great English historian, Sir John Seely; and when the living foundations of empire thus decayed, all the rest came down with a crash. The descen dants of the vigorous race that had con quered the known world spent their time shouting for “bread and games." The laws of heredity were not at fault; the vigorous, in fact, had died, and it was the rejected, those unfit to be Roman soldiers, that stayed at home and be came the Roman fathers of a nation whose course was run. Cords and Croup In Children. Many people rely upon Chamberlain’s C lUgli Remedy implicitly in cases of colds and eroup, and it never disap- ooints them. Mrs. E. II. Thomas, Logansport, Ind., writes: “I have found Chamberlain's Cough Remedy to be the best medicine for c-dds and croup I have ever used, and never tire of recommending it to my neighbors and frier ds. I have always given it to my' children when suffering from croup, and it has never failed to give them prompt relief.” For sale by all deal ers. The elevator man is a genuine human itarian. He spends his days in eleva ting men and women. The Quinine That Does Not Affect The Heed Because of its tonic and laxative effect. LAXA TIVE HROMO QUININE is betterthan ordinary Quinine and does not cause nervousness nor ringing in head Remember the full name and look for the signature of K. W. GROVE. 25c. This is “War,” as Prosecuted By the Germans. Denyise Gartior is a lH-year-old girl. She went out walking with her father in Paris on a recent forenoon. The two were enjoying the fair weather and a bit of homely confidence. War’s terrors to them were seemingly remote. The world looked good. But they forgot that Bcienoe was putting itBelf to the test of accomplishment—the science of aviation, experiments in which have set all mankind marveling. Overhead a great man-made flying thing whirred and wheeled. The two French folk gazed in wonder and awe. Then something happened. A bomb was dropped. There was a deafening explosion. The father’s head was torn from his shoulders und he full in a crumpled heap, a horrible, hickening spectacle. Denyise, too, lay bleeding on the ground. One of her legs was torn to shreds. But she was still con scious. “Don’t tell mamma,” she begged of the policeman who gathered her up in his arms. On Monday at the hospital when the surgeon came to tell her amputation was necessary, she smiled at him and then passed into merciful unconsciousness, only to awake a cripple for life, if indeed her life iB to be spared. Science meanwhile had triumphed. It had been proved that an airship could defy a wholo city. That from a height out of reach it could slrike to kill. That it could strike to kill not only armed men, hut the unarmed, and even little children. That it could strike in defense of a great principle, for the honor of a powerful nation. That it was not a mere plaything, but a weapon to be feared, terrible in its execution and swift to get away. Pos sibly the aviator who thus vindicated his cause and won another triumph in navigation of the air laughed in glee as he flew away. We may be sure the devils in hell did. But somewhere someone was taking note of Denyise Cartier. “Are not two sparrowa sold for a farthing? —and one of them Bhall not fall on the ground without the knowledge of your Father in heaven.” "The aeroplane which flow over Paris on Sunday and dropped bombs, killing two persons,” sayH a cablegram, “was firtd upon and brought to earth near Munlegron. The avia-or was killed.” Sometimes the mills of the gods do not grind slowly. The dissatisfied wife is proof of her husband's failure. No Longer a Fad. Macon Newa. Regarded at first by many as a fad, sleeping porches are now the fashion generally, North as well as South, because of their health-giving ad vantages. Within the last five years several hundred sleeping porcheB have been constructed for Macon houses, enabling many families to get the benefit of sleeping in the open. In 1841, when William Thompson Os borne was 29 years old, a group of able physicians informed him that he was about to die. He was consumptive, and his case waH considered hopeless. William Thompson Osborne died last week at Newburgh, N. Y., at the age of 1011. Till the end he was hearty and vigorous, and thoroughly enjoyed life. For Osborne, after he had been def initely condemned to death, took to liv ing in the open air. He loved the out- of-doors, and determined to enjoy to the utmost the few months of life re maining. This was long before the outdoor treatment of consumption had been put into practice. Osborne mere ly lived in the open because he enjoyed it. And straightway the hopeless con sumptive begun to be hopeful. Day by day he grew stronger. And he lived to see the passing of the children and the grandchildren of the doctors who had given him his sentence. Recognized Advantages. You will find that Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy has recognized advanta ges over most medicines ia use for coughs and colds. It does not suppress a cough, hut loosens and relieves it. It aids expectorations and opens the se cretions, which enables the system to throw ofT a cold. It counteracts any tendency of a cold to result in pneu monia. It contains no opium or other narcotic, and may be given to a child as confidently as to an adult. For sale by all dealers. “It’s pretty hard to sleep on an emp ty stomach," said the tramp wearily to the hustling farmer’s wife. "Why, you poor fellow!" she replied sympathetically. "Why don’t you turn over and sleep on your back for a little while?" Whenever You Need a General Tonic Take Grove’s The Old Standard Grove’s Tasteless chill Tonic ia equally valuable as a General Tonic because it contains the well known tonic propertiesof QUININE and IRON. It acts on the I.iver, Drives out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and Builds up the Whole System. 50 cents. The extraordinary dol!ar-for-dollar value and unequaled ser vice that explain the success of the Ford car are present even to a greater extent than ever before in the new Ford Coupelet. You have in this happy example of the two-cars-in-one idea, a greater degree- of comfort and luxury. A matter of two minutes and the top is up, transforming the roadster into a coupe and the driver is safe from all the rigors of weather. The Coupelet is built on the famous Ford chassis—the same chassis the qualities of which have made the name of the Ford a household word for reliable service and economy—less than 2c per mile. Ford Coupelet S750; Sedan S975; Town Car $690; Touring Car $490; Runabout S440. All fully equipped, f. o. b. Detroit. On sale at NOVNAN AUTO CO. Buyers will share in profits if we sell at retail 300,000 new Lord cars between August 1914 and August 1915 ...tv, esaw-’- 4 .tvrJw « -v-v