The Newnan herald. (Newnan, Ga.) 1915-1947, March 19, 1915, Image 10

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This R is for You! //■ VU.. Hot flashes or dizziness, fainting It 1 oil Sutter from apeI | Bi hysteria, headache, bear ing down pains, nervousness—all are symptoms of irregularity and female disturbances and are not beyond relief. _____ Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription ~ in directto Iho real enune ami promptly remove* the iJi»i"t*<*, ruppre:» i«*n thu pninn and norvoun nymptoma and thereby brings comfort in the pl.vco of prolonged misery. It hnn been sold by dnjggiHtn for over 10 year*, in fluid form, at $l.tX) por bottle, giving genernl natiiifaction. It ran now be hud in rugur coated tablet form, an modified by K. V. Pierce. M. I). Sold by nil medicine doalora or trinl box by mail on receipt of 60c in ptainpa. Every nick woman may connult un by letter, absolutely without charge. Write without fear .v. without ftni, to Faculty of the Invalids' Hotel, Dr. V. M. riEIPd;, r-cnidcnt, lAii Main St-nn-t, fiulTulo. New York DU. PITCH CF'K PEASANT P.^LLETH HEKUIATK TOE L1VKK NEWNAN HERALD NHWNAN, FRIDAY, MAR. IS. 11 K C A n E F 1! I. WHAT Y O II SAY In Hpoaklng of n pnraon'a fault*, l*rav. don't forgot your own; Itrrnembor, thnao with liomoa of gluaa Should acldoni throw h alone. If wo havo nothing olao to do Hut talk of thoao that aln, ’Tin Iietter wo commence at. home And from that point begin. Wo huvo no right to judge n man Until ho la fairly trinl; Should we not like hla ronnmny Wo know the world in wide; Some iniiy have fmilta, and who han none' Tho old an well aa young; I’erhapa we may. for aught we know. Have fifty to their one. I’ll tell you of a hotter plan. You’ll dial it workn full well: To try your own defects to cure Hefore on other* tell; And though I aoinetlmes hope to ho No more than hoiiio I know. M y own shortcoming* bid me let The fault* of other* go. Then let u* nil. when we commence To nlnndcr friend or f«»o. Think of the harm one word would do To thoae wo little know; — Kcmoiiibor, rurae* aomotime* like Our "chicken* roost at home;" Don’t apeak of other*’ fault* until Wo have none of our own. To the Teachers of Coweta County. I am scmling tho teachers of Coweta county some literature concerning the summer schools for tho teachers to he held at Carrollton and Powder Springs. Our teachers will be mostly concerned. 1 suppose, about the former school; and it is to this that I especially cull their attention. This school has been organized at the suggestion and request of Superinten dent M. I,, ttrittuin, in a desire to util ize the Agricultural School of the Four'll Congressional district, in locating, with in easy reach of the teachers of Carroll county and of ull adjoining counties, a summer normal school of the highest grade. In all probability, this enter prise is the lirsl step towards estab lishing a permanent summer normal for the teachers of this portion of the State. Teachers cannot attach too much im- IMirtaneo to a school of this kind. It is hoped thut the teachers of Coweta will eagerly seize the opportunity for im provement that is now offered them. Attendance upon this school will he accepted us a substitute for our annual institute. Teachers are urged to at tend tho entire session and not merely long enough to he able to say thut they attended. A short or irregular or in different attendance will be of very little benefit to anyone; hut thoao who attend regularly and eagerly and with a determination to profit, in every possi ble way, from the school, will he greatly benefited, perhaps more than they now suppose. Touchers, do not imagine that you do not need a school of thin kind or that you can get along well enough without it. Neithor proposi tion is true. Use every effort to at tend the school, and by all means at tend the entire session if such is pos sible. By so doing, your power for fu ture usefulness will bo greatly in creased; und the consciousness of this growth on your part will be a source of no little satisfaction \o you. If oppor tunity offers, preferment will bo given to those who make a full attendance. All who wish to attend the school are at liberty to do so, no white person be ing debarred. Prospective teachers should not fail to attend. Let each one do something to the end thut Cow eta may be creditably represented dur ing the entire session. If anv teachers prefer to do so, they may attend the school to be held at Powder Springs. Those who can at tend both schools should not fail to do so. They would thus be doubly bene fited. Teachers who leave the county for their homes beiore the opening of the summer normals may attend the sum mer school or institute most convenient to them, and forward certificates of at tendance to the County School Superin tendent. The date of the next annual examina tion has not been announced by Super intendent M. L. Brittain. If this ex amination should occur after the open ing of our summer term, teachers will continue their schools as usual. All licenses that expire this year will he good until the next annual examination. The date of tiiis examination will he given in The Newn&n Herald, at the proper time. Respectfully, J. K. fVndcrgrcst. The Quinine That Does Not Affsct The Head Bec»u„ ol it, Ionic «nS I unlive rSect. LAXA TIVE II HO MO QUl SIN XS in heller thnn ot dinar y Quinine a *d doea not cause u**rvou*aes& nor nneiDK in head. Remember the lull name and took u>r the aijroalurc of U. W. GROVE. 25c. What a Woman Can Do, Robert .1. JJurdette. A woman cannot sharpen a pencil, and. outside of commercial circles, she cannot tio a package to make it look like anything; hut, land of miracles! See what she can do with a pin! I be lieve there are some women who can pin a glass knob to a door. She cannot walk so many miles around a billiard table with nothing to eat and nothing (to speak of) to drink, hut she can walk the lloor all night with a fretful baby without going sound to sleep the first half-hour. She can ride five hun dred miles without going into the Brook ing car to rest, (and got away from the children). She can go to town and do a wearisome day’s shopping and have a good time with three or four friends, without drinking n keg of beer. She can enjoy an evening’s visit without smoking half a dozen cigars. She can endure the torturing distrac tion of a house full of children all day, while her husband cutfs them all howl ing to bed before he has been home an hour. Kvcry day she endures a dress that would make an athlete swoon. She will not, and possibly cannot, walk five hundred miles around a tanbark track in six days for$5,000, hut she can walk 200 miles in ten hours, up and down the crowded aisles of u dry goods store when there is a bargain sale on. She hath no skill at fence, and know- eth not how to spar; but when rIio jave lins a man in tho ribs in a Christmas crowd the man’s whole family howls. She is afraid of a mouse, and runs from a co*, but a book agent eun’t scare her. She is tho salt of the chqrch, the pepper of the choir, and the life of the sewing society. Farmer Jones, tinding help scarce in his neighborhood, was forced to visit the city, where he finally obtained a man bold enough to desert the attrac tions of Iho town for the lonesome life if a country dweller. The fellow proved exceedingly dull, but plodded along, stolidly obeying instructions. The third day Farmer Jones said: "I want you to clean up the pig-pen and the stables und the hen-house and all the other out houses." Tho new bund worked vigorously for a couple of hours, when he appeared before his employer with both eyes nearly closed, his mouth swollen, and red lumps all over his face and neck and hands. "Gimme my money," he said; "I’m goin’ to quit." "What’s the matter?” asked the farmer. “I don’t know whnt’s the matter,” said the victim, “but it happened when 1 started to clean the bee-hive." In a certain muchine shop an appren tice was one day swinging his hammer somewhat languidly, when along came the boss. An angry expression o’er- spread his countenance as he observed the performance of the lad. He took the hammer from the boy and deliv ered himself of the following- "When 1 see a man that takes his hammer by the end of the handle, like i this, and strikes tine, hard blows- like that, like that—1 pay the man any where from $18 a week up. But when a man takes his hammer by the middle, | like this, and strikes gentle taps —like > this, like this —he gets only $0 a week, and he’s the first to be laid off when work's slack." Then the boss returned the hammer to the apprentice, thinking that he had taught him a good lesson, but the shrewd lad came hack with: "Would you mind showing me, sir. where I ought to hold the handle for $3 a week?” Recommends Chamberlains Cough Remedy. "I take pleasure in recommending Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy to my customers, because 1 ha' - e confidence in it. 1 find that they are pleased with it and call for it when again in need of such « medicine," writes J. W. Sexson, Montevallo, Mo. For sale by all dealers. Whenever a public function is a fail ure there nevi-r seems to he anybody in particular to blame, but when it is a success everybody is responsible for it. Whenever You Need a General Tonic Tate Urove’s The Old Standard Grove's Tasteless chill Touic is equally valuable as a General Tonic because it contains the well known toaic properties of QOININE and IRON. It acts on the I.iver, Drives out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and Builds up the Whole System.j 50 cents. I 1 Fair Exchange. Cleveland Plain Dialer. "Can you tell me why it is," asks a friend, "that women now remove their hats at theatres, while no such rule of custom obtains at concerts or Sunday entertainments?" The answer must he this —that re forms move slowly. Ten or a dozen years ago the papers were full of bitter jests about women who wore high hats at the theatres. Those jokes cannot be used any more, because women aren't allowed to wear their hats, whether high or low, at the show shops these days. But at con certs—well, that's different again. We overheard this at a Sunday concert: "Madam, will you grant me a fa vor?” asked the man behind. "With pleasure," answered tho lady in front. "Would you kindly remove your hat? It annoys me. ” "Certainly, sir, if you will return the favor. ” "How do you mean? I shall be glad to—” “Will you kindly remove your breath. It disgusts me.” In spite of Sunday'rules and laws, as wo Haid before, it takes time to ac complish all the necessary reforms. A Judge in North Carolina was sen tencing a big, loose-jointed negro who had been convicted of murdering an other negro. “George Early,” His Honor Baid, "you have been found by a jury of twelve men, tried and true, to be guil ty of murder in the first degree, for having killed, in cold blood, Moses Stackhouse, and it is the sentence of this court that on the tenth day of August the sheriff of Polk county take you to a place near the county jail and there hang you by the neck until you are dead, dead, dead! And may God have mercy on your soul. Have you anything to Hay for yourself?” The negro shifted from one foot to the other and twisted and untwisted the old felt hat he held in his hands. All eyes in the court-room were upon him. Finally, rolling his eyes up at the Judge, he said; “Look yere, Jedge, you all don’t mean dis cornin’ August, does you?” That the whole South owes a debt of gratitude to the noted Ku-Klux Klan, the mysterious band of vigilantes or ganized just after the Civil War, was declared in an address by Mr. Chal mers Deaderick, of Knoxville, Tenn., a few days ago. Mr. Deaderick de scribed the strange career of the Ku- Klux Klan and showed how it had served to keep down disorder in the days when their new-found freedom had made the negroes dangerous. He paid a tribute to the men who were brave enough to organize it and carry it to success. Many members of the old Ku-Klux Klan must still be alive, but it is an odd fact that one seldom hears a veteran admit having worn the white sheet and mask of the mys terious order. It must be that the oath of fifty years ago is still binding. NOTHING BETTER FOR WEAK WOMEN “I Never Spent Any Money That Did Me So Much Good as That I Spent for Vinol.” Bellefontaine.Ohio.—“I wish 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 spent for Vinol. My nerves were in a very bad condition, making mo very weak, tired, 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 and 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, Bollefontaine, Ohio. Nervous, weak, tired, worn-out. wo men should take Mrs. Lamborn’s advice and try Vinol for there are literally thousands of men and women who were formerly run-down, weak and nervous, who owe their good health to Vinol. 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 mv'es it so efficient in all such cases. JOHN R. CATES DRUG CO., Newnan In Memoriam. Mrs. Eulala Braswell was born July 4, 1857. She was married June 17, 1903, to E. L. Braswell, and died Dec. 24, 1914. For years Mrs. Braswell had endured much pain and suffering. Physically weak for years, she strove her best to make her home a bright and happy place for her husband and step-children. Her patience and gentleness of spirit during her years of suffering was re markable. She has left upon her loved ones, and all who knew her, the im pression of a Christ-like character. As a last resource she was carried to Atlanta for an operation, hoping there by to be relieved of pain and spared to her loved ones; but her body was too weak to stand the strain and she passed away. She knew her Lord, and so her gentle spirit left her pain-racked body and entered into the presence and rest of her Heavenly Father. Through all pain at times she’d smile. A smile of heavenly birth; And when tho angels called her home She smiled farewell to earth. Heaven retaineth now her treasure. Earth the lonely casket keeps; And the Bunbeains love to linger Where our sainted mother Bleeps. A Friend. Moreland, Ga., March 10th. “Enjoy your children all you can now, for you do not know what sorrow muy come when they are grown,” we heard a wise man say to a young moth er. ’.‘Take all the sweetness that each day brings, and live with it. Watch their growth; enjoy their expressions of affection; warm your heart with the glowing love and unstinted admiration they so freely bestow upon you; you will never have a better lover than your baby boy or girl. To them you are the beau tiful queen, the infallible one, the ruler of the household and a very angel of joy and mercy. They turn to you in gladness and sorrow, and find always a present help. You are wise enough to them now, but when they are older they will discover your limitations. They will love you still, hut with the love of equality, not of adoration. When the will of Mrs. Lillie Tucker, of Altoona, Pa., was read a few days ago, it was found that she had left to her divorced husband a bequest of $15,- 000. This statement appears in the will: "He went to Reno to get free, but he is mine in the sight of God, for whom God hath joined let no divorce court put usunder." Such old-fashioned platitudes are rare these days. We seldom hear them outside the pulpits, and this is probably the first time such a sentiment has been incorporated in a will. It is explained that Mrs. Tucker was a “church worker, ” and she evi dently believed the fundamental tenets of her religion. We are a 1 ttls curi ous to know what the legateu will do with his $15,000. — ■ ♦ For the Stomach and Liver. I. N. Stuart, West Webster, N. Y., writes: “1 have used Chamberlain’s Tablets for disorders of the stomach and liver off and on for the past five years and it affords me pleasure to state that 1 have found them to be just as represented. They are mild in tneir action and the results have been satis factory. I value them highly." For sale by all dealers. Three towns in Georgia have a cur few law — Cornelia, Bainbridge and Eastman. In Cornelia none under 18 years of age is permitted to remain on the streets after 7:30 p. m., unless they have permits from parents. In East man all under 16 are required to turn in at 8 p. m., in case they have no permit. In Bainbridge the hour is fixed at 8:30 p. m., and all juveniles under 16 must be at home by that hour. Cornelia has fixed the penalty for vio lating the curfew law as follows: First offense, 45 minutes’ confinement in the city prison; second offense, by two hours’ inprisonment; and the third by working on the streets. A girl can’t be blamed for forgetting a fellow when he forgets himself. The income tax doesn’t bother the man whose principal holdings consist of castles in the air. How To Give Quinine To Children. FTIKRTI.TNK is the trade-murk name gtreo to an improved Ouiume. It is a Tasteless Syrup, pleas- (MU to take ami doe* not di>turb the storuach. Children take it and never know it is Quinine. AUo especially adapted to adults who cannot cake ordinary Quinine. Poes not nuu-eate nor cause nervousness norringiug in the head. Try it the next time you need Quinine lor auy pur* poae. A»k tor 2 ounce original package. The uajnc FAiBRiLlNE ia blown in bottle. 25 cents. In a Bottle -Through a Straw is the only best way to have your Chero-Cola. This insures uniform ity in flavor—perfect cleanliness. Always pure, wholesome and refreshing. € 0&//V/C Chero-Cola Dyspepsia Tablets vrili relieve your indigestion. Many l-ieop’.e in tiiis town have used them and we have yet to Lear of a case where they have failed. We know the for mula. Sold only by us—25c a box. John Ft. Catss Drug Co. FRESH GARDEN SEEDS, All Varieties Our Seed Irish Potatoes are strictly Eastern raised, and guar anteed. If you plant our potatoes it means a sure crop. SSfpFFFH ,■ • | — - .- - - ..... _*, y_y_ „j:. _jc.j.—jl. . Let 11s show you our line of field and hog wire fence; also, lawn and yard fencing. Farmers are buying it in quantities this I year, which means more “hog and hominy.” We are agents for galvanized steel fence-posts. The life of these posts, as tested by the factory, is fifty years. With three hands you can build a fence around a 10-acre field in six hours. We also handle roofing. Felt roofing, $1.50 to $2 per square. Big line of galvanized sheet metal roofing. See us for prices. We want your business;-WE HAVE THE GOODS. JOHNSON HARDWARE CO. TELEPHONE 81, NEWNAN, GA. Farmers’ Supply Store We have now entered fully into the new year, and, as usual, are well prepared to take care of the trade of the friends and customers who have taken care of us. Those who did not sow oats in the fall should do so now, using an early variety of seed, because all feedstuffs will be high. We have for sale the famous 90-DAY BURT OATS—a variety that we can recommend highly. GEORGIA CANE SYRUP in 5-gallon and 10-gallon kegs, half barrels and barrels. The PEACOCK BRAND is the best syrup made, and we can sell it at jobbers’ prices. A full line of PLOW TOOLS, STOCKS, TRACES, HAMES, BACKBANDS, and BRI DLES. Can dress up your mule with a com plete outfit for the plow. HUTCHESON ROPE for plow-lines. Will say, in a general way, that we carry in our store everything needed on a well- regulated farm. We buy for cash, in car load lots, and you will find our prices as low proportionately as cash discounts in buying can make them. Come to see us. You are always welcome. 8 Insurance—All Branches Representing Fire Association, of Philadelphia Fidelity and Casualty Co., of New York American Surety Co., of New York Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Co., of Newark, N. J. 14 1-2 Greenuille st., Over H. C. Glover Go. CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RAILWAY CO. CURRENT SCHEDULES. ARRIVE FROM Griffin Chattanooga . Cedartown Co In in be- 11:10a. * 1:40 p. m. . 6 :3d A. m 3 :(*> * v 7:17 p. m. 11 ■> :35 r K Griffin Griffin Chart am* ga Cedar town Columbia DEPART FOR 1:40 P. M. . 6JU. M. .11:10 A. m. 7:17 P. M. . . 7:40 A. M. T. S. PARROTT 5:16 P *