The Newnan herald. (Newnan, Ga.) 1915-1947, May 07, 1915, Image 8

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

.Weak Heart U.iny people suffer from weak hearts. They may experience shortness of breath on exertion, jrnin over the heart, nr dizzy feelings, opnrr -••<! breathing after meals or their eyes become blurpnl, the heart is not sufficiently strong to pamn blood to the extremities, and they have cold hands ana feet, or ixmr nppetite becaa.se of weakened blood supply to tho fct irniu-l’.. A heart tunic and alterative should he t*..-□ which has no bad after-effect, i/iicU is Dr. Pierced Golden Medical Discovery which con 4 akin no il.in;;t;rons narcotics or alcohol. It helpn the* humnn r; *n in the constant manufacture of rich, r 1 bl-wl. It holpa the *tornrwh to n. iir.ii.v. * f r t al<ounthoproper elements from ♦ hr f *1. thereby helpinjr t n | in ,J cw • r iiy [t>flia. heart-burn And many unr ; f.. _»u • nymp- tuma, wt*»p t xrrjt«ivo ti -uo was to in convalourcnco from feverr; 1 llw mri- duwu, aiucrnic, thin-blooded people, tho "Discovery’’ is refrcuhirg ana vitalizing. In liquid or tablet form at moat drug sfor** or tend SO one-cent atampa for trial box tn Dr. Pierce'a Inoalida' Hotel, fiuffalo, Al, Y, Rend Cliaplcr VII on Circulatory Or«nn* in the "Medic»J Advluf”-A French «*loth- ! Iiound l»ook of 1008 p«u«*r »rnl on »*r«ipt t-f 31 onr*cenl aisunpa, midrci* m above, j NEWNAN HERALD NEWNAN, FRIDAY, MAY 7 THE TEST. TrtlK’»m»n! Ay*\ that's the lent: To take tip that und Iravi' the real. To aim for truth i»nd hit the mark. To iitrike mrainat the ■motlmrlntr dark, Ami out of atrife and nut of pain Itiao un honewt man again! To Ik* n man! Who could a*k more In this great human work day war of earning, not what life rnny give, hut i ermorn the right to live. And from the battle and th«* gloom lCi*»f htIII a man In manhood'a bloom! To lie a man! Jtiat that ami nee llnw else comes In victory Wealth and success, attendant g<-J-. While comfort awls and beauty nods. And nil the sweet world seems to bo (•■ad of a man, clean-win led und free. To be a man! What's wealth and nil. Crowns, fame and power, beside that call Of inner sweetness nnd content That unto every man ia sent Who strwpwU ' always while he can To la* u man. to Is* n man! Georgia Markets For Georgia Farm Products. Atlanta, May 3.— Market Agent J. A. Montgomery, of the State Depart ment of Agriculture, has just com pleted • canvass of the brokers, job bers nnd commission merchants of At lanta, at the request of Commissioner J. D. Price, which will prove an eye- opener to the fnrrners of Georgia, nnd Bhnw them that they huve a possible market right here in the capital of the State for millions of dollars’ worth of food nnd feed products, if they will only make them up to standard quality nnd put them up in merchantable pack ages. The Atlanta dealers handled last your 3,117,000 bushels of corn, of which 98.(1 per cent, was grown outside the Stato nnd shipped in. Most of this corn wus inferior to the averago Geor gia product, and yet because Georgia farmers have never made a determined effort to get Atlanta as h market, At lanta continues to follow her long- established habit of buying corn else where. Out of 2,700,000 bushels of wheat marketed through Atlanta Inst year not a single bushel of it was grown in the Slate. And yet Atlanta consumers of wheat say the Georgia product is a good one, and they should he glad to take it if enough of it were raised and proper attention were given to grading and cleaning. Think of the opportu nity here, with wheat selling around $1.60 a bushel! The same story is told by Mr. Mont gomery as to hay and oats. Out of 5,690 cars of hay handled in Atlanta last year 99 67 per cent, came from outside the State. Out of 2.888 curs of oats 99.21 per cent, was shipped in from Western States. Georgia farmers themselves are among (he largest consumers of these products, when they might raise those of better quality for less money right at home. There are brought to Atlanta for dis tribution in ibis territory annually about 594,500 barrels of Hull". Here is another neglected opportunity for Georgia wheat. Atlanta dealers handled last year 167 car-leads of rutabagas, and every rutabaga was grown outside of Georgia; 7S s per cent, of 41,030 bushels of white peas came here from ether States; 78 per cent, of 23,2011 cases of canned sweet potatoes were shipped • here from i Isewwhere, and all of 266,- 600 cast s of canned tomatoes likewise came from foreign sources. Atlanta gets practically all her winter stock of Irish potatoes from other States, nnd she u-ed last year 1,203 car-loads. Five hundred and forty-four car-loads of cabbage were sold in this market, and . 96 94 per cent, were foreign grown. All the lima beans, peanuts and onions sold in the Atlanta market were shipped in from outside of Georgia. There are seme products in which Georgia does a little better than the foregoing. A little better than half, or about 500 car-load*, of the mixed feed stuff's sold in the Atlanta market were made in Georgia. Atlanta ought not to get a single sweet potato anywhere ex cept at home, and yet last year 323 car loads were brought in from other States, while Georgia supplied this market with 500 car-loads. Georgia hens should furnish every Atlanta egg, nnd yet out of ?340,200 worth of this product 47.0 per cent, were laid in oth er Slates. Likewise, 48.1 per cent, of $•175,900 worth of poultry passing through this market came from else where. About 60 per cent, of the canned syrup sold in Atlunta is Georgia grown. Every can of it could easily be made within the State. There is a good demand for it, and good profit in it. , “The foregoing,” said Commissioner Price, “will give some idea of the splen did market possibilities in Atlanta for Georgia food products. It will be the purpose of this department to leave nothing undone to bring the consumer in the Atlanta territory into closer touch with the Georgia producer. Our aim and ambition is to see every dol lar's worth of food products consumed here produced within tho State, and we shall work untiringly to that end, be lieving that it will mean the greatest prosperity Georgia can know. But, as the department has pointed out, the Georgia farmer must do his part. He must produce the best he knows how, and put it in attractive packages. If he will do this he will soon find that he will have no trouble in securing a mar ket for every dollar’s worth of food he can make.’’ ♦ - Profanity. MiMuphia Commercial-Appeal. Men are careless in their manner of speech, and it must he regretfully ad mitted that many women are not as careful ns they slnuld be. The growing use of profanity is one of the crimes of to-day. The man who uses profanity or obscenity in public conveyances and meeting places or in any public place is no gentleman. It is becoming a common nuisance. Occa sionally he is soundly thrashed, as he de serves to be. In nine cases out of ten he escapes, because a woman’s escort restrains himself rather thin make matters worse by a public exhibition. Some indulge in profanity uncon sciously, as a matter of habit, but tact fully guard themselves in the presence of ladies. The fact that they indulge in the use of profanity at all should cause them to feel thoroughly ashamed of themselves. In the catalogue of sins there is none more vile and execrable than this wan ton indulgence in profnnity. It usually clusters with other sins. It is both an unreasonable and unmanly omission. It is a violation of good morals, good taste, and is an offense against both God and man. There are some sins of over-indul gence which may be accounted for be cause they are productive of temporary profit or pleasure, but profaneness is productive of nothing unless it is shame on earth and punishment in the hereaf ter. Sermons have been consistently | preached against profanity, but the i carelessness of speech continues. It must tie remembered that there , are dean men in this world who suffer the same embarrassment that any good woman does when their ears are as- I sailed by insults to their Maker. It is the most gratuitrus of all kinds of wickedness, and can he only recognized as an acknowledgment of the sover eignty of the devil over those who in dulge in the habit. Even in this advanced era of civiliza tion it is difficult to hit upon a proper and effective method of dealing with these offenders. A B.uton clergyman ' has made a suggestion. He deserves credit for that, even though his sug gestion is a very poor one. The Boston plan is to arm citizens with printed tracts dealing with the evils of profan ity. Whenever a man uses offensive language he is to be presented with one ' of these tracts. The trouble with the Boston clergyman is his ignorance of human nature. The man who uses pro fanity in public is quite beyond the use of tracts, for if lie were tractable he would not swear at all. The most absurd thing that the aver age man gets into his head is the idea that he is reasonable. He who understands what he says will economize in the use of his words To Drive Out Malaria And Build Up The System Take the Old Standard GROVE'S TASTELESS chill TONIC- You know what you ate taking, as the formula is printed on every label, showing it is Quinine and Iron ill a tasteless form. The Quinine drives out malaria, the Iron builds up the system. SO cents Whenever You Need a General Tonic Take Grove's The Old Standard Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic is equally valuable as a General Tonic because it contnL.s the well known tonic propertiesof QUININE and IRON. It acts on the Liver, Drives out Malaria, Enriches the Iilood aud Builds up the Whole System. SO cents. One Day: A Play. We write about the play that God staged ages ago, and which has had the longest continual run of any play. The earth is the stage. Nature is the stage manager. It's a great play. It repeats every twenty-four hours, and to show us His versatility, so much greater than man's, God chenges it every day. It opens with the rising of the sun each morning, setting before us a scene more magnificent than man can imag ine or understand, much less produce. From blackest darkness, the stage lights up, until the most modest (lower, the tiniest insect, is visible to the naked eye. Then the actors come forth from the wingB — men, women, trees, rivers, lakes, oceans, the grass, horses, horned cattle, birds, wild and tame, wild beasts, und our little friends, the insects. Now they go to work. Each knows his part- -but some fail to act as the Master planned, and they meet with misfortune. For those who oppose the Law are doomed surely. But all in all, the actors do well —for 'tis bred in their hearts, in their beings, that if they would thrive they must go according to the law that is higher than man; and only perverse blindness to truth leads some few otherwise than in the white road. With each passing moment the scenes change. All the actors are busy, ac cording to their various roles. They play, they labor with body or brain, they sing, they are tearful, they pbt, they counterplot—and the plotters are not the happiest actors. It does appear that some actors are particularly happy in the parts assigned them—and these be ones who plod steadily ahead, help ing themselves and others to useful ac complishment. The villains and villainesses? They are unhappy, as villains and villainesses always have been and always will be. There are many love affairs and mar riages. There are business tragedies, and rumors of war, and war—and al ways the villain “gets his.’’ It’s a one-act play, but it is tremen dous. The music is the grandest of all mu sic. It murmurs and thunders, it whis pers and sobs, the wind and the trees and the brooks and lakes and rivers and heaven’s artillery and man’s and beasts’ squeaks and fowls’ squawks and birds’ songs being the orchestra. Along towards the end of the play, which is to say late in the day, the cli max begins, and the drones are pushed aside with the villains, to make room for healthy and unhealthy “live ones.” Then in the last few scenes all relax to enjoy themselves in various ways. Some dance, some sing, some sleep- men, trees, beasts, insects — some prowl. And finally the darkness of night steals over the stage—and you have seen the greatest play ever produced. If you have kept your eyes open, you have learned a lesson, many lessons. You may play your part better on the morrow. For a Torpid Liver. “1 have used Chamberlain’s Tablets off and on for the past six years when ever my liver shows signs of being in a disordered condition. They have al ways acted quickly and given me the desired relief,” writes Mrs. F. H. Trubus, Springville, N. Y. For sale by all dealers. These Concerns Demand Absti nence. The Milton Manufacturing Company, the American Car & Foundry Company, and S. J. Shimer & Sons, of Milton, Fa., have issued orders demanding that their employees abstain from alco hol and refuse to sign license petitions, or otherwise indicate sympathy for the saloon. Thirty men were discharged by the American Car & Foundry Company be cause they signed liquor license appli cations. These companies do not desire to in fluence the opinions of the employees in regard to prohibition, but they take the stand that the man who signs a li quor license application does not prop erly appreciate the danger of liquor to himself and the community. He is, therefore, not a safe employee for a concern demanding efficiency. “Indulgence in the use of liquor is a menace to all business interests,” de clared Mr. George S. Shinier, president of the Milton Manufacturing Company. “If the employees should be protected by the employer, why shouldn't the em ployer be as well protected by the em ployee? Our employees have congratu lated us upon the step we hive taken.” Whooping Cough. "About a year ago my three boys i had whooping cough and I found Cham- j berlain’s Cough Remedy the only one I that would relieve their coughing and whooping spells. I continued this treat- ment and was surprised to find that it 1 ! cured the disease in a very short time,” | | writes Mrs. Archie Dalryniple, Crooks-[ ville, Ohio. For sale by all dealers. And probably there are instances ! where a wife doesn't remind he.- bus- j band that his brother's wife has more j than she has. V Invigorating: to the Pale and Sickly The CM Standard gcueial utrenEtheninc tonic. GROVE S TASTELESS chill TONIC, drives out Malaria .enriches the blood.and builds up the sys tem. A true tonic. For adults and children. 50c The Sparrow in Georgia. Macon Evening News. One of the factors in resisting the boll weevil in Georgia will be the as sistance of the birds now protected by the game law which bears Winter Wimberly's name. Among these birds are the field larks, blackbirds, bee 1 martins, grass sparrows, bull bats, | thrashers, and mocking-birds, none of which may be shot at all. Eventually, it is believed, the open season for shoot ing of quail and doves will be even more limited than at present. Evidence has so multiplied that there is no longer any dou'-t as to the value of certain birds for the protection of crops from worms and insects. Even the sparrow is defended on this ground. In fact, that bird, the commonest of the feathered tribe, is now receiving high praise in certain quarters. The Woman’s Welfare Club of Marquette has petitioned the Michigan Legislature to repeal the law which provides for a bounty of two cents a head for sparrows during the months of December, Jan uary and February. In a report of the biological survey, based on observations during the years 1911 and 1912, it is estimated that one brood of young sparrows can destroy at least two thousand alfalfa weevils in a day. In this connection there is the authority of no less a person than Prof. R. J. DeLoach, of the Georgia Ex periment Station, that in 1905, at Statesboro, Ga., he witnessed the spectacle of about one thousand spar rows attacking afieldof German millet which had been invaded by several millions of the army worm caterpillar. In about forty-eight hours these little birds had completely cleaned the millet patch of the worms, to the relief of the owners of the adjoining - farm. “The sparrows were royal fighters, and did their work well, and I have had great er respect for them since that day,” says Prof. DeLoach. He says that the birds did not eat the worms whole, but merely shook them out of the skin and swallowed the skin. The sparrow is the only bird which inhabits all the cities of the United States, and which seem to prefer city life. However, there are thousands of them in the rural districts, and, if what is now said about them is true, there cannot be too many of them. If the boll weevil ever does make an en try into Georgia perhaps the sparrow will be among the first to attack that pest. ARE YOUR KIDNEYS WELL? Many Kewnan People Know the Im portance of Healthy Kidneys The kidneys filter the blood. They work night and day. Well kidneys remove impurities. Weak kidneys allow impurities to multiply. No kidney ill should be neglected. There is possible danger in delay. If you have backache or urinary trou bles, if you are nervous, dizzy or wo-n out. Begin treating your kidneys at once ; Use a proven kidney remedy. None indorsed like Doan’s Kidney Pills. Recommended by thousands. Proved by Newnan testimony. J. H. Foster. 47 W. Washington St., Newnan. savs: “My back gave me lots of trouble. Invariably in the mornings it was sore and lame. The least bit of work or any stooping caused me to suf fer awful!v. Dizzy spells almost over came nv at times. The kidney secre tions alio passed irregularly. Colds settled in my kidneys and made my condition worse. I used two boxes of Doan’s Kidney Pills and they cured me of all symptoms of kidney trouble.” It is better to hold your job by work than pull; hut a pull will help some. TAX COLLECTOR 74 YEARS OLD Expected to Resign on Account of Feebleness — Gained Strength and Twenty-four Pounds by Taking Vino!. Corinth, Miss.: — “I am a city tax collector and seventy-four years of age. I was in a weak, run-down condition so that I became exhausted by every little exertion. My druggist told me about Vinol, and I decided to take it. In a week I noticed considerable improve ment; I continued its use and now I have gained twenty pounds in weight, and feel much stronger. I consider Vinol a fine tonic to create strength for old people.”—J. A. Price, Corinth, Miss. As one grows old their organs act more slowly and less effectually than in | youth, circulation is poor, the blood gets thin, the appetite poor and diges tion weak. Vino), our delicious cod liver and iron tonic, is the ideal strengthener and body builder for old folks because it creates a good healthy appetite, strengthens digestion, enriches the blood, improves circulation and in this natural manner builds up, strengthens and invigorates feeble, run-down, nerv ous and aged people, and if it does not do all we say, we will pay back your money. JOHN R. CATES DRUG CO., Newnan Dyspepsia Tablets Will Relieve Your Indigestion John R. Catei Drug Co. Cole's Combination anters Plants corn, cotton, peas, sorghum, strews guano. War prices are now on. Our S17.50 machine for S15 cash, S17.5u 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 conies 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 aud hog wire fence; also, lawn and yard fencing. Farmers are buying it in quantities this year, which means more “hog aud hominy.” JOHNSON HARDWARE CO. TELEPHONE 81, NEWNAN, GA. Phone 147. Corner Madison and Jefferson Streets. T. S. PARROTT Insurance—All Branches Fire Association, of Philadelphia Fidelity and Casualty Co., of New Yorh American Surety Co., of New Yorh Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Co., of Newark, N. J. 14 1-2 Greenville st., Over H. C. GlouerCo. Farmers’ Supply Store We wish to thank our customers and friends for their loyal support and kindnesses shown us since we moved into our new store. We are now better prepared than ever to serve them. We have clean, commodious quarters and a new, clean stock of goods throughout. Plenty room to take care of our friends’ packages. Also, ample hitching grounds for stock, as well as for parking vehicles. Our line of shoes consists of the best work shoes made, as well as fine shoes and oxfords—all new stock. We buy direct from the manufacturer, get ting the best that can be bought for the money. We carry also a full line of staple dry goods. “Headlight” overalls we claim to be the best made, and we sell them. Work pants for men and boys. Everything to eat for man and beast. DeSoto flour, the very best for the price. Every sack guaranteed. Buy it and try it. Cuba Molasses. We buy in large lots the following articles, and can sell them at wholesale prices— Flour, Starch, Snuff, Soap, Soda, Tobacco, Tomatoes, (canned,) Lard, Matches, Coffee. Help out your feed bill by sowing peas and sor ghum. We have peas and sorghum seed for sale. Sorghum seed, Red Top, Orange and Amber. Scovil hoes, handle hoes, grain cradles, barbed wire, hog wire, poultry wire. Come ro our store, rest here, store your bundles, and drink ice water with us. We will enjoy having vou do this. CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RAILWAY CO. CURRENT SCrffeDULES. ARRIVE FROM Qriflin 10ui7 A. X. Chattanooga 1:4t) p. m. Cedartown 6:39 a. m. Colam baa 9:06a m. DF.PART FOR 7:17P.M. (jriffln 6:39A.M. 1:« *■ * Chattanooga llqu a. M. „ Cedartown 7:17 P. M. _ 6:33P.M. Columbus 7 :W A. M. BHSP 1 *