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PROPER CLOTHES
For Young Men
Hart Schaffner & Marx are makers of clothes for young men.
Every young man who reads this should understand that when it
comes to buying clothes there’s one thing about this store that
makes it different from all the others, that is that
Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes
are sold here, and here exclusively. There is just as much distinc
tion in handling these clothes as there is in wearing them.
Young men want distinctive style, and we offer it to them.
Get the right clothes this spring. You want the sterling all-
wool quality in the fabric; you want the superior tailoring; you
want the smart, lively style which you find only in Hart Schaff
ner & Marx Clothes•
Just look this young fellow over carefully, you’ll see some of
the points of style which have made these clothes so popular with
the best dressed young men.
Big Line of Straw Hats
$1.50 up to $5
Barnett, St. John Co.
“Home of Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes”
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DON’T FORGET
That Marbury s Furniture Store
Is the ideal place to get fitted out in summer fur
niture, and at the lowest prices for the best
quality.
Exclusive Agents for Vudor Specialties
Porch shades that give the best satisfaction.
The Vudor reinforced Mammocks at prices as
cheap as lower grades.
Chair Hammocks, the kind that endure.
(Ireen and brown fibre rush porch furniture,
swings, etc.
French willowcraft. furnitirc, any finish.
Crex rugs and runners, any color.
All our prices are less than they were last sea
son. Come now and let’s trade on your home
furnishings.
07* Shades
*
give you privacy with the joys of
“out o’ doors.” Sleep, oat on your
porch I
Get air, keen appetite nnd deep sleep
Through ur Air, who soothe** nerves back
to health. Vudors/ash You enn Bee ouf
but not in. They keep fresh, for they're
stained not painted. We have them Id
various widths. $3 to $10 will equip tho
average porch with VuUo« , «*..
J. N. MARBURY
NEWNAN HERALD
NEWNAN, FIRDAY, MAY 14.
SHARPSBURG.
Miss Nora Swanson, of Fairburn, re
turned home Wednesday, after a visit
of several days with Mrs. Al Vineyard.
Mr. S. W. Glass spent a few days in
Atlanta last week.
Mr. Marshall McGee, of Raymond,
visited friends here a few days ago.
Mr. Alvan Ingram and friends came
down from Atlanta this week for a
short visit, and to try their skill at
angling at Wynn’s pond. They report
ed fine success.
Quite a number from here attended
the opening game of the Georgia-Ala-
bama league between Griffin and New-
nan.
Mr. C. J. Owens, from near Newnan,
paid our Sunday-school a pleasant visit
Sunday afternoon, and at the close of
the lesson period gave a very interest
ing talk along lines of better organiza
tion and more consecrated work on the
part of the teachers and officers. Bro.
Owens formerly resided here and has
many friends in the community, who
are always glad to see him.
Mrs. Eddie Cook, of Haralson, visited
relatives here a few days ago, and at
tended the closing exercises of the
Sharpsburg public school.
Mrs. Bessie WallisandMiss Hutchens,
of Fayetteville, visited relatives and
friends here the past week.
Mrs- Lilia Avery, of Senoia, was on a
visit to relatives here a few days last
week.
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Cole, of More
land, spent Sunday with Mr. J. R. Cole
and family.
Mr. Louis Ingram, who is a student
at the Tech High School, spent a few
days with relatives and friends here
last week.
Mrs. Ed Turner has returned from
an extended visit to relatives near Fay
etteville.
Mrs. Virginia Vineyard and Miss
-Nora Swanson spent Tuesday of last
w ®®k with relatives in Senoia.
Miss Ava McLean, of Newnan, visit
ed Mr. J. E. McLean and family the
.past week.
The recent rains have done much to
improve crop conditions in this section,
the wheat and oat crops would have
been almost a total failure but for the
welcome showers.
The closing exercises of the Sharps-
burg public school on April 3(J were well
attended, and a neat sum was realized
— more than $50—which will be used
buTld' ' rn P roveraen ^ the school
A very enjoyable event of last week
■was a party given the young people of
the town and community by Mr. and
Mrs. T. N. McWhorter, in honor of
MisS Nora Swanson, of Fairburn.
Games were enjoyed until a late hour,
after which a delicious salad course
was served.
Dr. R. H. McDonald and bride, of
Manchester, were guests Sunday of Mr.
and Mrs. W. S. McDonald.
May 12th.
Card of Thanks.
We wish to thank the good peo
ple of Newnan for their gracious kind
ness to us upon the very sad occasion
of the sudden taking away of our hus
band and brother. Our grieved hearts
appreciate so much the many sympa
thetic words spoken to ub. These most
gracious words and deeds seem to come
from friends whose minds and hearts
are freighted with rich grace from the
Almighty. We feel that they have been
baptized feelingly with the grace of the
Lord Jesus Christ. May the Lord bless
everyone.
Mrs. H. H. Hendrick,
Mr. J. L. Almon,
Mr. F. Roy Almon,
Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Stevens,
Mr. A. G. Hendrick and family.
“Stonewall” Jackson’s Wile.
Richmond Newa-Leador.
To some her husband was an un
knowable Puritan, awful in his genius
for battle; to her he was the simplest
of companions, lovable above all for his
unshaken meekness.
Soldiers shook their heads and won
dered if he were not mad when they
saw him stalking into a thicket to pray
while the shells were breaking at the
other side of the wood; she alone knew
that he won his battles on his knees.
They told strange tales of his actions
on the march, and they thought him a
very judge in Israel when he raised his
hand heavenward on some silent coun
try road; she knew how, when he could
leave the battle line, he would hasten
to his wife, to his baby, to his devo
tions.
His staff officers had stories in
numerable of his vigilance in camp-
how he would walk alone, unmindful of
sleep, and surprise some sentinel at his
post; she remembered one night when
a little girl of 4 came to his house with
her father, separated for the first time
from her mother, and was aroused in
the night by the great captain bending
over her because he could not sleep un
til he was sure the little cnild was con
tent.
Men who staggered after him in the
valley or climbed Thoroughfare Gap
with him in the hot August weather
wondered if he had no mercy; she re
membered how patiently he toiled in a
little Sunday-school in Lexington—how
generously he gave of his substance to
all who would ask it.
Observers in the winter of 1861-62
saw him remorseless, unflinching, a
soul without joy; she spent with him
then, she wrote, “as happy a winter as
ever falls to the lot of mortals upon
earth.”
Some hinted that he wanted to raise
the black flag, and told how he sent a
soldier to death in twenty minutes for
daring to disobey orders and entering a
private home; she knew how he tore
the braid from his cap as a bauble for
the little Corbin girl, and wept in bit
terness of spirit when he learned that
the child had died.
God made “Stonewall” Jackson a
great soldier; his strength of character
made him a faithful Christian. We
wonder if the gentle spirit that took its
flight the other day did not make him a
nobleman.
Round Trip Fares via Central of
Georgia Railway.
To San Francisco and San Diego, Cal.
—Account of California expositions.
Tickets on Bale March 1 to Nov. 30,
limited three months from date of
sale, except that no ticket will bear
limit later than Dec. 31, 1915.
To Houston, Texas-Southern Baptist
Convention and Southern Sociological
Congress, May 8-19.
To Fitzgerald, Ga.—Grand Lodge, I. 0.
O. F., of Georgia, May 25-26.
To Savannah, Ga.—Georgia Bankers’
Association, May 27-29.
To Columbus, Ga.—Chautauqua, May
17-23.
To Richmond, Va.—United Confederate
Veterans’ Reunion, June 1-3.
To Athens. Ga.-Summer School, Uni
versity of Georgia, June 28 to July 31.
For fares, schedules and full infor
mation call on your local ticket agent.
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RAILWAY,
“The Right Way.”
White Man With Black Liver.
The liver is a blood purifier. It was
thought at one time it was the seat of
the passions. The trouble with most
people is that their liver becomes black
because of impurities in the blood due
to had physical state, causing bilious
ness, headache, dizziness and constipa
tion. Dr. King’s New Life Fills will
clean up the liver, and give you new
life. 25c at your druggist’s.
Time is Short and Eternity Long.
Word and Works.
Suppose the average business life is
forty years; in fact, it is less than half
that long — hut call it forty years.
Schooling and preparation will at least
require four years in the grades and
four years in high Bchool—eight years —
one-fifth of the expected business life.
If equal proportions are required for
our preparation for eternity, then how
short is our time! Why, the longest
human life is hut a second, a flash, as
compared with the time for which we
must prepare. How shall we accom
plish what we should if we waBte any
time at all, even for recreation? Yet
about us are many who seem to care
for nothing but recreation— have no
serious thoughts for anything save bow
to find the most amusement.
They have no time to prepare for
life. Then how can they expect life
itself to afford much preparation for
the infinite of an endless eternity?
A successful business man once said:
"I am sometimes tempted to hurry,
but I Bimply haven’t the time. I know
work done hurriedly often has to be
done over; and there is so much to be
done, and life is so short, I cannot find
time to do even once all that should be
done, and I simply cannot afford to
increase the chances of having to do
some of it twice by trying to do it in a
hurry.”
Our lives, like food, need a little Balt
and spice now and then, and we can do
more and better work sometimes, after
some relaxation. But there iB not a
man or woman, boy or girl, in all the
land who can afford to use more than
one evening a week for amusement-
even that iB more than can be spared,
in justice to one’s self.
—
Business vs. Idleness.
The Importunities and perplexities
of business are softness and luxury
compared with the incessant cravings
of vacancy and the unsatisfactory ex*
pedients of Idleness.—Doctor Johnson.
Whole Family Dependent.
Mr. E. Williams, Hamilton, Ohio,
writes: “Our whole family depend on
Pine-Tar-Honey." Maybe someone in
your family has a severe cold. Perhaps
it is the baby. The original Dr. Bell’s
Pine-Tar-Honey is an ever ready house
hold remedy—it gives immediate relief.
Pine-Tar-Honey penetrates the linings
of the throat and lungs, destroys the
germs, and allows Nature to act. At
your druggist’s, 25c.