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NEWNAN HERALD
N E W NAN, FI U D A Y , A 1“ II. 30.
O N 75 DOLLAR A YEAR
IN ADVANCK.
No Need for Women To Fear Pass
ing Years.
Baltimore Sun.
The adventjof the New Year brings
with it thoughts which lire both sweet
and Fail memories which cheer as well
as those which cause a sigh. What
woman is there who does not glance
retrospectively over other years, whose
birth was heralded even us this one is,
by bells and clangor, happy voices,
whistles, shouts and laughter. Yet
what —
■' - ttfKit* it to rr , |“' , *t
How limu Is slipping from our foot,"
So sang old Omar, and wiser indeed
is that spirit which says, bb the poet
has written:
“Forgot Iing, then, the morrow,
l,#-t oh bo kInn to-day
)t<*or«‘ttinK not tin* norrow,
Joy for It* joy muni jiny.”
New Year means a clean page, a
new chapter, a Pandora’s box not yet
opened, Who knows what it has in
store? Is there not always fascina
tion in that which is unknown?
The girl just flowering into beauty,
the mature woman at the height of
her charm, the older woman who is
not yet ready to resign herself to old
age, will all ask one boon of the New
Yenr, and thut boon shall be that it
will not rob her of any one charm she
now possesses, but will teach her how
to grow in beauty as well us grace
each passing year.
■ Beauty likes not to hear the tolling
of the bells, which mean that the Old
Year is dying. Something of the
perishable fragrance of youth is dying
with him this i3 the Had thought that
will not be silenced. Another year
vanished- this is the reflection which
echoes in the heart of womankind the
world over.
More dauntless is that spirit which
recks nothing of time, but. resolves to
prove the fact that each added figure
of all of her years shall bring its own
beauty, its own grace, its own loveli
ness. It was a woman who wrote—
'*( no m«iro of griff and dying!
Sing lIn* time* inn tuvjflly Hying!
.1 tint un hour
Youth'* in flower:
l*i\ i tin- 111,*,mi in remember
Jn tllo Hlmduw of DminlxT."
Itcuuty Inis its varying roses. Who
shall n l say that the delicate, palely*
Hushed rose of November is not far
more fair in its pearly, frail and star
ry beauty than its Hushed and triumph
ant sister which waves and wanes in
the month of roses? There is a beauty
for every age in woman, and there is
no need to mourn or to fear the pass
ing of the years. The valiant spirit
and the mind of real wisdom is tlie
one which shall indeed cherish and
bring out every year the peculiar rose,
as it comes.
“Hut 1 see lines upon my face,"
sighs the woman past 3d. “My fresh
color is gone."
The lines upon I lie face at this age
need not be disfiguring lines. They
muy be the faint pencilings which toll
of kindness, of 'aughter and goud
cheer. And while the fresh color of
youth has passed, still there is the
glow which is just as beautiful—the
glow which speaks of serenity and
health of mind ami body.
“At 50 is it not foolish for me to
think of beauty?" asks a soft voice,
and to this query the answer is em
phatically, no. The woman of 50
stands at the door which opens into,
perhaps, the best years of her life.
She should have learned wisdom by 50;
her bodily health should be assured und
strong. Her face will reflect all this,
and have the beauty which is of noon-
clear, soft and altogether satisfying.
To-day's woman of 50 is younger than
the woman of 30 of fifty years ago.
“My hair is white, so 1 am indeed
not any longer pretty,” comes the
plaint from the woman approaching 00.
How mistaken she is all can testify
who have seen for themselves women
prettier at 00 than they ever were in
all their lives before. One rises before
my mind's eye. It is the slender fig
ure of a white-haired woman, in soft
black silk, with dainty white lace at
the throat. Blue eyes shine forth
white as an apple blossom. Snow
white hair rivals the white lace at the
throat. There are lines upon the
face, but only those of gentleness and
patience. A grandmother, to be sure,
but a veritable April grandmother.
She is beautiful with a beauty which
youth cannot rival—which, indeed, her
youth never rivalled. She has more
charm and fairness than her own
daughters, who may, if they are for
tunate, some day fulfill the same
promise of the years to distinction and
charm. So the matter of white hair
does not preclude any longer the claims
of youthful maturity, which is lovely
and charmii g.
How cun a woman be more beautiful
at GH than JO, you ask? By daily, in
telligent care. The hair must he kept
soft and glossy, the skin clear and free
from liver spots, the teeth in good,
order. More care is necessary as the
years multiply, hut prevention .*huld
be every woman's watchword if she
aspires to a beautiful old age. Re
serve one hour a week for the facial
masseuse as regularly as your house is
swept and dusted, and each passing
year will increase, not diminish, your
I beauty.
The New Year, therefore, should
| bring the message of a renewed effort
to realize all that worth while—
beauty of spirit, of face—beauty of
thought, and beautiful living. It
should not even hint that the time for
these tilings is past. This is a mistaken
idea. The old year may have had its
| mistakes, but from each of them
some lesson rnay be learned. It may
have had its sorrows, hut with each
day they shall be the further re
moved. It may have had its disap
pointments, but. who shall declare that
they shall not be made up some time in
the untried future? Not one woman
throughout the land need be cast down,
bo far as her own dower of good looks
is concerned, simply because a new
figure henceforth stands upon the cal
endar. Let her rather resolve to make
the coming twelve months the best
twelve months of her life, when her
charm shall be greater, her eyes
brighter, her health stronger, her per
son more graceful and more charming
than it ever has been before.
A., B. & A. R. R. Offers Scholarships
at State College as Corn
Club Prizes.
The large number of boys and girls
that entered the Corn Clubs in the
counties traversed by the Atlanta, Bir
mingham & Atlantic railroad, to com
pete for the prizes offered last year,
has encouraged the management of the
A., B. A. railroad to olfer the same
valuable prizes this year, viz:
Twelve boys’ Short Course Scholar
ships, State College of Agriculture,
Athens, Ga., to be awarded to the
twelve boys who make the best record
in the twelve counties traversed by the
A., H. & A. railroad, in accordance
with Government requirements, which
takes into consideration four factors,
viz: First, yield; second, profit; third,
ten-ear exhibit; fourth, written report
as to how crop was made.
Only one scholarship will be awarded
in any one county.
The following counties in Georgia are
traversed by the A., B. & A. railroad:
Bacon, Ben Hill, Campbell, Coffee, Col
quitt, Coweta, Crisp, Dooly, Fayette,
Fulton, Glynn, Irwin, Macon, Marion,
Meriwether, Fierce, Talbot, Taylor,
lift, Troup, Thomas, Taylor, Ware,
Wayne and Wilcox,
The selection of the prize-winners
will be made by the District Agent in
charge of Boys’ Corn Clubs of the Co
operative Demonstration Work in
Georgia.
In the selection of alternates, boys
who are patrons of the A.. B, & A.
railroad and who reside immediately
tributary thereto will be given pref
erence, other conditions being nearly
equal.
The announcement of the prize-win
ners will be made at the Atlanta Corn
Show, and it is hoped that the Corn
Club of each county will be represented
at Atlanta by a large delegation of
members.
We feel that the scholarships will
prove of more and lasting benefit than
any other prize we could offer.
The greatest economic problem that
confronts the people of Georgia to-day
is that of feeding ourselves. We must
get away from the “one-crop” idea.
We must first produce what is neces
sary for "home needs” —and as much
more as possible. After “home re
quirements" are provided for, the in
come from cotton, or r ther “so-called"
money crops, is all profit.
It will be greatly appreciated if you
will do what you can to stimulate
greater interest in the Corn Club idea
in Georgia. W. W. Croxton
General Fassenger Agent.
J. I,. Edwards, Traffic Manager.
Lady Who Started Veterans’ Re
union is Dead.
Atlanta Constitution.
News has just been received of the
death, April 14, of Mrs. Elizabeth Glov
er, at her home, Chickasha, Okla. This
will be learned with regret by thou
sands of friends in Georgia and over
the South.
Mrs. Glover had attained her S5th
year. She spent the most of her long
life in Georgia, but for some twenty
years past had lived with her daughter,
Mrs. A. C. Johnson, at Corsicana, Tex.
She was the widow of Col. Thomas
Glover, of the Thirty-first Georgia reg
iment. It was at her suggestion that
her husband's regiment gathered in an-
i nual reunion, and out of this grew the
j Confederate Veterans’ reunion. At the
I Richmond reunion she was accredited as
the originator of the movement leading
| to these happy historic gatherings of
the “boys in gray” each year.
Mrs. Glover was attended by her
daughter during her short illness. The
interment was at Corsicana, Tex. She
had numerous relatives and connections
in Campbell and Douglas counties of
this State.
Commenting on the suggestion that
Americans use white goods as a means
of solving the dyestuffs problem, the
St. Louis Globe-Democrat aptly ob
serves that white is the emblem of
peace, “and we shall make a virtue of
necessity by visibly expressing in our
habiliments the desire of our souls to
ward the European conflict.” Further:
“One hundred million people all at
tired in white should have a wonder
fully psychic effect. Dress is more
compelling in the spiritual world than
we may have realized. Half the in
fluence of religious fraternities lies in
their fixed design of gannenture, and
the church has recognized this fact
from the earliest monastic orders to
the Salvation Army.”
The youth who is unwilling to toe the
mark usually remains at the foot.
Beer Condemned.
After twenty-five years of practice
Dr. S. S. Lungren, a leading physician
and surgeon, has this to say about beer:
”It is difficult to find any part in the
confirmed beer drinker's machinery
that is doing its work as it should.
This is why their life-chords snap off
like glass rods when disease or accident
gives them a little blow. Beer drink
ing shortens life. This is not a mere
opinion; it is a well-settled, recognized
fact. Fhysicians and insurance compa
nies accept this as unquestionably as
any other undisputed fact of science.
The great English physicians decide
that the heart’s action is increased 13
per cent, in its efforts to throw off al
cohol introduced into the circulation.
The result is easily figured out. The
natural pulse-beat is 76 per minute. If
we multiply this by 6fi an hour, and 24
hourF in a day, and add 13 per cent.,
we find that the heart has been com
pelled to do an extra work during that
time in throwing off the burden of a
few drinks equal to 15.5 tons lifted one
foot high. ”
Beers.-Huddleston.
Senoia Enterprise-Gazette, 8th inst.
A beautiful wedding was that of
Miss Grace Truman Beers, of Cataula,
and Mr. Julius C. Huddleston, of this
city, which took place Wednesday
afternoon at the home of the bride’s
father, Mr. .las. H. Beers. Only the
close family connection and a few
special friends witnessed the ceremony.
Mr. Huddleston is head salesman for
Messrs. J. T. & L. E. Arnall, of this
city, is a progressive young man, and
held in high esteem by hosts of friends
and the public generally. The bride,
as Miss Beers, was one of the mosL
popular and beloved young ladies of
Cataula. She has visited our city and
will be gladly received by her many
friends here.
Miss Helen Gowd was maid of honor,
and Mr. G. A. Huddleston, brother of
the groom, was best man.
The happy pair arrived here Wednes
day evening and will be at home to
their friends at the residence of Mr.
and Mrs. W. A. Huddleston.
Mysteries of Rheumatism
Practically Solved
Action in the Tissues of a Remarkable Antidote
= 1
S. S, G. is a Regular Wizard
Rheumatism Is often the effect of some
other blood affliction that 1ms left its lm-
press In the joints, muscles and mucous
coverings of the body. It works into the
tissue cells, those tiny, little bodies in
which nutrition goes on. And it is hero
that a most remarkable medicine known
as S. S. S. does Its most active and most
effective work.
Its action is marvelous. Bed-ridden
rheumatics get on their feet as if by
magic. That cold, clammy sensation that
made you hug a red hot stove is gone in
a twinkling. That excruciating pain that
made a feather lay as heavy.as a ton of
coal on the skin is gone. You get up and
dance with glee.
Your rheumatism is gone—absolutely!
It is an actual logical fact, that Swift's
Sure Specific flushes your blood, gives
your entire blood circulation a fine
thorough hath. It just naturally and in a
twinkling irrigates every atom in yeuc
in Driving Out Rheumatism.
body. It rushes into every cell, causes
every hone, muscle, ligament, tendon,
mucous surface and every nerve to thrill
with freedom, with health, with new
found springiness.
And best of all, S. S. S. though a pow
erful searching, overwhelming enemy to
pain and the causes of rheumatism is as
pure as the dew on a peach blossom, as
powerful as the heroic works of nature,
os searching ns the peremptory demand of
the most exact science.
Ask for and insist upon getting S. S. S.
the world’s cure for rheumatism.
For private, personal advice on stub
born chronic rheumatism write at once
to the Swift Specific Co., 203 Swift Build
ing, Atlanta, Ga. Their medical depart-
ment is famous on all blood diseases, nnd
is equipped to make personal blood tests,
approved by the highest medical authori
ties. Get a bottle of S. S. S. today. Then
away goes rheumatism for all time.
j ft S OBit-rS Mfll
mi sfiiiQo
MPi 1
wU
If £
'‘Dodson's Liter Tone" Is Harmless To
Clean Your Sluggish Liver
and Bowels.
fpli! Calomel makes you sick. Tt's
horrible! Take n (lose of'the dangerous
drug tonight ami tomorrow you may lose
a da\ '* work.
Calomel is mercury or quicksilver
which causes necrosis of t ho bones.
Calomel, when it comes into contact
with sour bile ern.-hes into it. breaking
i . up. Tills is when you feel that awful
nausea and cramping. If you arc slug
gish and “nil knocked out," if your
liver is torpid and Itowels constipated
or you have headache, dizziness, coated
tongue, if breath is bad or stomach sour,
just try a Hj-oonful 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 straight' n you right up
and make you feel line and vigorous I
want you to go back to the store and
pet. your money. Dodson's Liver Tone
i- 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 Dml-
snn’s Liver Tone will put, your sluggish
liver to work and clean your bowels of
that sour bile and constipated waste
which is ( logging your svsfetn and mak
ing you feel miserable, I guarantee that
a bottle of Dodson's Liver Tom* will
keep your entire family feeling fine for
months. Give it to yonr children. It is
harmb .-s: doesn’t gripe and they like its
pleasant taste.
PICNIC SEASON
IS HERE
I am prepared for it with a large and varied assort
ment of pchted meats, jams, jellies, pickles, crackers,
ad infinitum. In fact, everything good for the out
ing hamper, and at remarkably low prices, quality
considered.
If in doubt, come in or telephone me; I can
probably aid you with a few suggestions. Much of j
the pleasure of occasions of this character depends
on the contents of the “Grub Basket.” I can make i
your outing doubly enjoyable.
J. T. S W I NT
Telephone 54
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Oliver Chilled Plows
Buy the genuine Oliver Chilled Plow. Do not fool yourself
and get an imitation plow. B. H. Kirby Hardware Co. is
the only place where you will find them — all others are imita
tions.
We buy in car-load lots and can always suit you. In fact,
we carry the best lines and grades of everything in the hard
ware business. Be sure to see us and get our prices.
'PIIONK 2111
B. H. KIRBY HARDWARE COMPANY
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- STONECYPHER’S IRISH POTATO BUG KILLER
Rheumatic Pains Rilieved.
Why sutler from rheumatism when
relief tnav be had at so small a cost?
Mrs. Elmer Hatch. Feru, lnd., writes:
”1 have beeh subject to attacks of
rheumatism for years. Chamberlain’s
Liniment always relieves me immedi
ately, and 1 take pie .sure in recom
mending it toothers." 25c. and 50c.
ixittles. For sale by all dealers.
“1 am sorry, but 1 advertised for a
Scandinavian cook.” said Mrs. White.
"Lawd sake!” replied Paralysis
Pearl Waddles. “What diffunce do it
make what a lady’s Tigion am, dess
so's she kin cook?”
Guaranteed to destroy Irish potato
bugs without fail or injury to the
vines. One or two applications us
ually sufficient to save the entire po
tato corp. Easily applied, does not
wash off. Insist upon STONE-
CYPHER’S—sure death to the bugs.
Money back if not satisfactory.
Manufactured only by
Stonecypher Drug and Chem
ical Company,
Westminster - - South Carolina
For sale by
J. F. LEE DRUG CO.
Newnan, Georgia.
Panama Pacific Exposition
Opened Feb. 20
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
Closes Dec. 4
Panama California Exposition
Opened Jan. 1
SAN DIEGO, CAL.
$71.90 Round Trip Fare
Closes Dec. 31.
$95.00
s
From Atlanta via
0UTHERN RAILWAY
“PREMIER ICARRIER OF THE SOUTH”
Atlanta, Georgia
Atlanta, Georgia
JR.KliWS i^EWESRSCOVERt
Wili Snrrdv Slot) Thsl Counb.
Dr.&snoj's New LiSePillft
The best in the world.
Invigorating to the Dale and Sickly
The Old Sti-ndard general fttrengtheniup tonic,
ISKOVK'S '1 ASrKLKSS chill TONIC, drive* out
Malur in. enriches the Mood .nnd build* tip the sys
tem. A uuc tome, l or adult* aud childxcu. ioc
SHOE POLISHES
Three kinds—Black, White and Tan
Easiest io use — Best for all Shoes
At all dealers at the
one price
The F. F. DALLEY GO., Ltd.
Buffalo, N. Y.— Hamilton, Can.
$71.90 applicable via Chicago, St. Louis, Memphis, Shreveport; returning via same
or any other direct route. Not via Portland or Seattle.
$95.00 applicable via Chicago, St. Louis, Memphis, Shreveport; returning via same
or any other direct route. ONE WAY VIA PORTLAND--SEATTLE.
Tickets on sale March 1 to Nov. 30, inclusive. Final return limit three months
from date of sale, not to exceed Dec. 31, 1915.
STOP OVERS permitted at all points on going or return trip.
SIDE TRIPS may be made to Santa Fe, Petrified Forest, Phoenix, Grand Can
yon, Yosemite National Park, Yellow Stone National Park, Pike’s Peak. Garden of
the Gods, Glacier National Park, and other points of interest. FREE SIDE TRIPS
to SAN DIEGO, and California Exposition from Los Angeles.
THROUGH PULLMAN SLEEPING CARS TO CHICAGO, ST. LOUIS,
KANSAS CITY AND DENVER, MAKING DIRECT CONNECTIONS
WITH THROUGH CARS FOR THE PACIFIC COAST, NECESSITATING
ONLY ONE CHANGE OF CARS.
For complete information call on nearest agent, or address
R. L. BAYLOR, D. P. A. J. C. EAM, A. G. P. A.