The Newnan herald. (Newnan, Ga.) 1915-1947, April 02, 1915, Image 10
Nervous
Emotional
Dizzy
Depressed #
/Mm. Addle Curl*infer, nt
Cedar St., Cairo, III., *» mtc
Doctor I’lcrcc e* followi:
*'! »*n4ftl rrnf • fnr your Tom-
mon Hpdm» *1 Adv»««*r f>r
my djitjght«*r w> <> bn* rwoMHly
m»rr1«li»nr| I Vri'iv. 'hook Will
be ofi . h • ' ■ • i 1
r*nd And u*fd f* r [i. r j y**nrB tlif
valunhlr* tr^stmer’s contain*!
in the ‘Mndical AKIvt* «r 1
have tj», • n n-nnjr bottle* of l»r.
Piero ■ I ;. ort»* Prescription,
nnd have !--n r>-‘ fored tohnnlU
f.irhUr < lu-olit
r« rrif'! forv. • r,trn rmn utrrni^h
iltJll I* f, fit - i“T lhO l.LTVOA l t>*i
gf-rw-ral hMlib.' 1
Vt/’OMEN who are restless, with
vv constant change of position, “fidget-
inena," who are abnormally excitable or who
<'X|K'nenro fainting or dizzy spells, or nervous
headache and wakefulne** are usually sufferers
from the weaknesses of their sex.
DR. PIERCE’S
Favorite Prescription
is the frothing, cordial and worr.no'y t'rnic tfrat
brings about an invigorating calm to t.," nervous
system. Overcomes tho weak net ' and the drag
ging pains which resemble the pains of rheu
matism. Thousands of women in the past forty
years can boar witness to i i benefit?.
Your d®ftl<*r In mcdlcino* ' r > * I*. In livi' I r -~ itr*r»
ro*U«J tiit let form', or yn i can act. 1 Dior • • * M*Rt{<4
fur A trial h,t f.r I1 ■ I av n-P*
I HoUsl
or d Hurvl «l Institute, Ii .tf.ilo, N. Y.
mi'imiiiimiiimmiiimimiimiimiiimmiiiiimiiiiii
Dr. Fifrre’i Plrairnt PellrH Re||oU!e and Invigorate
Stomach, Liver »no Bowel*, 5ag»r*Cn*tcd Trny Granule.
iiiimiimmmmiimiimimimiimimmmimmmmi
NEWNAN HERALD
NKWNAN, FI HD AY. APR
i: AST K u.
Ring lour! nrrl clear your holla for K»*t‘*r-tlinc
Now «iul«’k. now > l>»w;
f rom a* n to «e* rntrh tip the happy chime;
Bring nil the flower* ttint lilow
For wr» ath and crown, an offering pore and -woe*
ChHat’* rising morn to gn*«*t.
Rina long and deep your bell* for Buffering tiorne.
With patient grace;
Bring purple panap-a color* that ore worn
Rent with n sorrowing fan*
Atid writ •> with pine and rypre > t und young mm
The emblematic croaif.
Ring »»oft und alow your holla a tend nr knoll.
And aoftly weep,
Itrlng amaranth and *tainle*a a*phode|
In memory of that sleep
Which wrapped the world in throe days’ a-dicn
gloom
Whilo Ho was In the tomb.
Ring, ring your bells across the happy land
This Raster morn’
Christ sits m heaven at the Father's hand;
firing blotuwm* to adorn
A conquered death, whoiw* victim ha* arisen
A grave which la no prison.
(Juliet Mart'll Inham.
Hail, Miracle of Deathless Life!
The spirit of Muster had its birth in
that dim past when man’s wondering
eyeH first vaguely sensed the promise
of the swelling seed, the mystery of
bursting hud, tho miracle of resurrect
ed life in leaf and flower. Down
through the countless ages have thun
dered the hosannas of vernal joy, peans
of welcome to the reborn earth, preg
nant with its gift of immortality. In
every land, savage und civilized, in ev
ery step of man’s uplift from barbar
ism to culture, from prehistoric to mod
ern times, each passing year has wit
nessed tho passionate rhythm of wail
ing, lamentation and agonized despair
ing cry fnr the dead god, until, at a
mystic moment, penitential sacrifice
and fasting, weeping anil mourning,
give way to transports of joy which
hail the resurrected deity who has bro
ken again the grim guteH of death.
We Christians have no monopoly of
the undying Master idea of death, res
urrection and immortality of a deity
who dies to save the world and who
rises triumphant from the dead. That
has been the radiant principle of Im
munity's instinctive religion from the
early dawn of man's spiritual life. The
ancient temples of a hundred different
religions have re-echoed to the lamen
tations for dead deities, and their old al
tars have vibrated anil thrilled with the
joyous hymns in honor of resurrected
gisis. The germinal idea is found in al
most all the myths of savage peoples.
It was the pervading iden in the faith
of the old Hindus; it inspired the an
cient Egyptian belief in immortality;
in the pre-Christian religions of Bufiy-
lon, Assyria and Asia Minor it was fun
damental, while around this idea in
Greece, Carthage and Rome centered
the most sacred of rites and mysteries.
Strange ami sometimes horrible in sac
rifice were the ceremonies which ush
ered in the reborn world rituals of
worship which drenched altars with
human blond in imitation of the god
the sharp prod of biting hunger which
ancient man viewed as a punishment
inflicted by the gods presiding over the
various aspects of nature and the sea
sons, can he found the reason for much
that seems strange and monstrous to
us in the old religion.
Adonis was the god who represented
the yearly decay and revival of life, an
annual death and resurrection. His
worship spread from western Asia
throughout the Mediterranean littoral,
lie was pictured as bleeding to death
with the red leaves of autumn and com
ing to life again with the fresh green
of spring. Often Adonis was imperson
ated by a living man who was sacrificed
upon the harvest field. In the great
Phoenician sanctuary of Astarte at
Hyblus the death of Adonis was mourned
to the shrill wailing notes of the flute,
with weeping, lamentations and beat
ing of breaBts; but next day the dead
god was believed to rise from the dead
and to ascend to heaven in the presence
of his worshipers, amid hymns of joys
and glad shouts of “Adonis is risen
from the dead!" It is in the worship
of Attis, however, that occurs the most
striking resemblance to many of the
observances of the Christian Master.
Attis was believed to have been mirac
ulously born of a virgin mother, and,
like Adonis, to have died a violent death,
rising from the dead at the time of the
spring festival. Hideous orgiestic rites
marked the ritual of Attis worship in
Rome, Days of blood and atonement
preceded the hilarious joy of the great
^lay of resurrection. While devout mul
titudes flocked to the sanctuary, the un-
sexed priests of Attis and Cybele, to
tho music of flutes, drums and cymbals,
slashed themselves witli knives, and in
wild, frenzied dances spattered the al
tars with dripping blood. The efligy of
Attis bound to a pine tree played an
important part in the ceremony. "The
Day of Blood” witnessed the period of
mourning over the effigy of the god
which was afterward buried in a sepul
cher. The worshipers prayed and fasted
in wailing and lamentation in prepara
tion for the sacramental meal. But
when night had fallen the grief of the
the worshipers turned to ecstatic glad
ness in the Festival of Joy. Suddenly a
light shone in the darkness. The tomb
was opened and the temple thrilled to
shouts that told that Attis had risen
from tho dead. And as the priest
touched the lips of the mourners with
balm he softly whispered in their ears
the glad tidings of salvation. The res
urrection of Attis was hailed by his vo
taries as a divine promise that they,
too, would issue triumphant from the
grave. A blessed sacramental meal and
a baptism of blood were among other
ceremonies for the initiates, a ritual
which included a sacrifice of virility.
It meant to them a new spiritual birth
and remission of sins.
Nature herself gives to humanity her
choicest treasures when she clothes the
world with grass and flowers at Master
who died that the world might live. In tide. This uwukening brings a promise
other places the great spring festival
took the form of joy transformed into
the abandon of license. But in all these
perversions the central idea remained
as an expression of man's attempt to
fat hum the secret of the universe and
to adjust his little life to its awful mys
teries. ,
We moderns of to-day can have no
adequate conception of what the advent
of spring meant in the childhood of
mankind. In a way we have conquered
the seasons and adapted ourselves to
their changing moods. But even a few
centuries ago man whs almost hopeless
in the grip of a relentless, pitiless
rhythm of superfluous plenty in summer
und starvation and death in the winter.
It was oi'ly the strong and vigorous
who survived the winter's light with
hunger. The ancient Dent was in very
feet a period of wailing and lamenta
tion, for at this time the gods seemed
to have deserted mankind, and the
earth itself, the great mother goddess
of fertility and fecundity, appeared to
have died hencuth their feet. The com
ing of spring, the resurrection of fer
tility, meant that
of beauty to last for many months. All
mankind hails with joy the dawning of
the Master morn. New hopes arise in
the deep, hidden springs e? tho heart,
new joys lend brightness to the eye
and color to the cheek, and new love
radiates the entire being, working its
wondrous miracles upon whomsoever it
descends. The highest type of love is
the unselfish, sacrificing variety, and to
attain this unalloyed quality wg must
give.
- -
A WISE CHOICE.
He Made
prayers had b"en answered, that his
sacrifices had been accepted, and that
his battle with hunger was over la
A Newnan Man Broves
No Mistake.
A hotel man is more subject to tho
recommendation of Ins patrons than
almost any other business man, but
Mr. Lewis selected Doan's Kidney
Bills when suffering from kidney
trouble. To prove that he made no
mistake in his choice, he given a signed
report of his satisfactory experience.
Read it:
W. R. Lewis, proprietor Virginia Ho
tel. Washington street, Newnan, Ua.,
says: “M.v kidney? wen out of order
and 1 suffered from a lame and aching
back. 1 felt tired and dull, especially in
, . . the morning. The kidney secretions
mans despairing passed irregularly, sometimes being too
Whenever You Need n General Tonic
Take Grove’s
The Old Standard Grove’s Tasteless
chill Touic is equally valuable ns a
Genernl Tonic because it coill.'U-.d the
well known tonic properties of QUININE
ami IKON. It action the Liver, Drives ! ' t , 1 '‘" ur duty to do our best to bright-
out Malaria, Itnriehcs the Blood anil , pn the lives of the people who live with
Builds up the Whole System. 50 ecu is. _ us or are dependent on us.
freqaent and then again scanty and pain
ful. I used six or seven boxes of Doan’s
Kidney’s Bills and thov cured me ot
all signs of kidney trouble. I have had
no return of the complaint since."
Brice 60c. al all dealers. Don’t sim
ply ask for a kidney remedy get Doan’s
Kidney Bills —-the same that Mr. Lewis
had l’oster-Milburn t’o . Rrops., Buf
falo, N, V.
The Empty Tomb.
Rev. hr. Georg* W. Shelton. Pittsburgh
It is Friday afternoon With "It is
finished,” His head drops upon his
breast, and the hopes of His disciples
are shattered. Pilate is glad to find
some balm for his uneasy conscience by-
granting the request of the rich friend,
Joseph of Arimathea, for the body.
Nicodemus, scholarly, timid and shrink
ing, comes into the light again, joining
jn the embalming, because he cannot
forget the evening’s talk with the
g’-eat Teacher. The tomb is sealed.
He is alone, save for His watching en
emies. The world’s hopes are dead. In
him they had Aimed high: now they
are ashes. They who loved Him cher
ish the past, hut have no future. The
long, sorrowful Sabbath day at last is
waning; the first day is dawning.
Through the mists of the morning,
hands laden with treasures of the
heart, while silver light of star and
golden gleam of sun mingle, the Marys
sadly seek the tomb, hoping to perform
the last service of loving devotion.
They approach with timidity, fear, awe,
w mder.
Lo, tho atone is rolled back! One sits
upon it clothed in light. He has has
tened from heaven to anticipate their
coming and to change their sorrow into
Bong by the announcement, "He is
not here; He is risen." The women
hasten to tell His disciples. Hope, the
last spark of which had gone out, is
kindled again in human hearts. Forty
days He lingers on the earth, until the
most skeptical cries, "My Lord and my
God!" Every disciple becomes a her
ald of His resurrection. They seal their
testimony with their blood.
Only the fact of Christ’s resurrec
tion can explain the revived hopes of
His despondent followers. Only a per
sonality that lives can rule the world as
Christ rules it to-day. Every believer
may share this Easter morning the
resurrection hope as it sends the sun
light of heaven into every darkened
heart anil into every open grave, re
vealing anew, "He is not here; He is
risen.”
Every tomb is now empty. May you
who stand, in factor in imagination, by
the grave of loved ones to-day catch
the vision and hear the voice, "He is
not here; He is risen.”
Death is not a wall, but a door into
life. As evening promises morning, as
winter spring, as the seed flowers, so
death promises life.
Best Treatment for Constipation.
“My daughter used Chamberlain’s
Tablets for constipation with good re
sults, and I can recommend them high
ly,” writes Baul B. Babin, Brushly, La.
For sale by all dealers.
Easter’s Message.
Rev. John Haynes Holmes.
This, to my mind, is the message of
the Eastertide:
We may interpret the resurrection in
a dozen different ways; we may believe
or not believe that this miracle took
place as reported in the gospels. But
that Jesus was never slain by the sol
diers of Pontius Bilate, but lived to
rally His disciples after the agony and
terror of Golgotha, to capture Baul and
load him over stormy seas and desert
wastes for the preaching of His word,
to call “the glorious company of the
apostles, the goodly fellowship of the
prophets, the noble army of the mar
tyrs,” in all ages and places into the
service of His kingdom; to speak to us
to-day as He has “spoken of old time
unto the fathers" and to “challenge us
to live and die for Him and His great
cause of righteousness” —all this is as
certain as that His body was nailed to the
cross of Calvary. After the crucifixion,
as before, Jesus was alive. He has
b.ien alive in every age, even the dark
est, that has succeeded upon the hour
of this mortal agony, and He is alive
to-day more truly and wonderfully than
He has ever been before in human his
tory. Of this we can be sure!
But what about ourselves? Are we
ulso alive—as the eleven were alive
when they reassembled in Jerusalem
and gave themselves anew to the king
dom of God on earth? Have we arisen
from our selfishness, cowardice anil sin
to meet the risen Christ and pledge our
hearts to Him, or are we dead—dead us
Judas when the first Easter dawned
upon the world? This is the question
which this latest. Easter puts to us. It
is not so much the insurrection of Jesus
as of ourseW-s which need concern us.
A merchant who had been traveling
for some months was informed upon his
return of the death of a valued friend.
A few days later he called on the be
reaved widow to offer his expressions
of sympathy. During the visit he re
marked;
"I was a very good friend of your
late husband. Is there not something of
his which I could have as a memento
of him?”
She raised her velvet brown eyes,
which a few moments before were
moist with tears, and said:
"How would I do?”
The only way some people could keep
a promise is to place it in a safe depos
it vault.
How To Give Quinine To Children.
FltnRIT.JNF Ulhctraitc-mnrk name cP-cu to nn
i"'t i "Vo! quinine. It is u Tn-lelevs Syrup, pleas-
<nl to take An-1 does not disturb thy stomach.
, iltlrru take it and never know it is quinine.
''- ’ esrK-cinlly adapted to adults who cannot
take ordinary Quinine. Poes not nauseate nor
nuse Ik rvourucs- nor ringing in the head. Try
it the next time you ueed Quinine tor auy pur
pose. Ask tor ounce original package. The
name t .bK ji.:1. is blown in bottle. .6 cents-
COULD HOT SLEEP,
COULD KOI Ell
Woman So Weak and Nervous
Could Not Stand Her Chil
dren Near Her — Vinol
Changed Everything for Her
Plant City, Fla. — " I wish I could tell
everybody about Vinol. For nine years
1 was in bad health. I got so I could
not sleep, and I could notstand it to have
my children come near me. I could not
even sew or do any heavy housework.
I was simply tired all the time. I tried
so many medicines I could not recall
them all, hut nothing did me any good.
One day a friend asked me to trv Vinol
and said it was the best tonic sfie ever
saw. 1 did so, and soon got the first
good night’s sleep I had had for a long
time. Now I sleep well, my appetite is
good, my nervousness is all gone and I
am so strong and well I do all my house
work and work in my flower' garden
without feeling tired or nervous. Vinol
has made me a well and happy woman. ”
— Mrs. C. H. Miller, Plant City, Fla.
Vinol contains the curative, healing
principles of fresh cod livers (without
oil| and tonic iron.
We ask every weak, run-down, ner
vous person in this vicinity to try Vinol,
our delicious cod liver and iron tonic
without oil, on our guarantee to return
their money if it fails to benefit,
JOHN R. CATES DRUG CO., Newnan
Gait and Character.
Plttabur? Dispatch.
By their walk you shall know them.
Here is a professor who has invented a
machine for recording the human gait.
“A person can be identified by his man
ner of walking as easily as by his fin
ger prints,” says the professor.
"Watch the man who drags his feet
along the ground, as if every step was
an effort. If he has any of the world’s
goods it is because it has been thrust
upon him. He is the kind of man that
would be in the first lifeboat that put
out from a sinking ship. The man
with dragging gait is the man without
a heart.
“The woman who has difficulty in
lifting her heels from the ground when
she walks is a whiner. She believes
the best she ever gets is the worst of
it, and she will go into the minutest de
tail about trivialities. The woman with
the dragging gait is the woman with
out spine.
“Watch the man who hurries along
as if he were anxious to part company
with the pavement. His steps are
quick und snappy. The man with the
Bnappy step has plenty of pep. When
you see a woman planting her feet
firmly on the ground and walking with
a free swing you may be sure she is
wholesome, to be depended upon, capa
ble. She will be your friend, your pal,
your sweetheart, on rainy days just as
much or more than when the sun
shines. ”
And a lot of wives whose husbands
are given to hitting both sides of the
street and the middle coming home
will find the gait machine a handy little
household object.
To the Housewife.
Madam, if your husband is like most
men he exoecis you to look after the
health of >ourself and children. Coughs
and colds are the most common of the
minor ailments most likely to lead
to serious diseases. A child is much
more likely to contract diphtheria or
scarlet fever when it has a cold. If you
will inquire into the merits of the va
rious remedies that are recommended
for coughs and colds, you will find th 't
Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy stands
high in the estimation of the people
who use it. It is prompt and effectual,
pleasant and safe to take, which are
qualities especially to be desired when
a medicine is intended for children. For
sale by all dealers.
A paper in a Michigan town recently
published this item: “The business
man of this town who is in the habit of
hugging his typewriter had better quit,
or we will publish his name.” The
next day thirty-seven business men
called at the office, paid up their sub
script! ns, and left behind them sever
al columns of advertising, and told the
editor not to pay any attention to fool
ish stories.
YOU MAY BE SORRY
IF YOU ACCEPT A
SUBSTITUTE FOR
This Reliable Cough Medicine
That cough is nature’s cry for help. It’s a
warning—a symptom, maybe of bronchitis,
lagrippe, even of pneumonia. It must be
checked at once. Hurry to the drug store for
Foley’s Honey and Tar Compound
AND BE BURE IT IB TIIE GENUINE
Don’t take a chance with a substitute. Unre
lieved coughs quickly get worse, especially ut
nightfall. Foley’B
Honey and Tar Com
pound will sooth auti
heal tho irritated
throat, take away the
tickle ar.d relieve tho
tight feeling in the
chest. It has no equal
for any kind of cough.
For over forty years
Foley's Honey and
Tar Compound has
been the standby with
thousands of families.
Remember the name—-Foley’s Honey and
Tar Compound and look for the beehive on
the yellow wrapper.
* if * EVERY USER IS A FRIEND.
For salt* by J. F. DEE DRUG CO.
Our Advice Is:
When you feel out of sorts from consti
pation] let us say that if
do not relieve you, see a physician,
because no other home remedy will,
gold only by us, 10 cents.
John R. Cates Drug Co.
Cole’s Combination
Plant
ers
Plants corn, cotton, peas, sorghum, strews gitr.no. \\ a:
prices are now on. Our S17.50 machine for S15 cash, $17.5
charged. This is a saving to you, and we have only a limited
quantity to go at that price. This machine will pay for itself
in one season. Your grain and cotton comes up with regularity
and at one time, and straight in the row so you can cultivate it.
Let us show you our line of field and hog wire fence; also,
lawn and yard fencing. Farmers are buying it in quantities this
year, which means more hog and hominy.”
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.
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 we’l-
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 alwajs welcome.
T. G,
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. GlouerCo.
T. S. PARROTT
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RAILWAY CO.
CURRENT SCHEDULES.
Or; ffiu
Chat tan ooga
CefUrti *wn.. .
CnlamhuB
ARRIVE FROM
11:10a. m
1:40 p. m.
. 6:39A. M.
9:96 A m
7:17 P. M.
6:35 P. M.
Griffin
Griffin
Chattanooga ..
Cedartovrn
Columbus
DEPART FOR
1:40 » . M.
.. 6:39 a. M.
. .11:10 A. M.
. 7:17 P. M.
. . 7 :40 A. M.
6:16 P-«