The Newnan herald. (Newnan, Ga.) 1915-1947, May 28, 1915, Image 10

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Weak Women! Some women arc weak because of ills that are common In Girlhood-Womanhood and Motherhood The prescription which Dr. R. V. Pierce used most successfully-in diseases ofwumin—which has stood the test of nearly half a century-is Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription Take this in liquid or tablet form as a tonic and regulator! **_ Kair D Richardson, of Beazley, Essex Co., Va., *ays. "I esteem It a pleasure to tastily to the’wonderful curative qualities of Dr. Pierce'* I'.voriti- P reacriP*)®" • r s^mc vVar* I suffered ifreally with weaknes* peculiar to my a«. WM treated by as'M’rtl physicians but gradually i(rew worse. One of my friends told me of theiJooJ ' jr • | a vonte prescription.” I went to the drug store and got* bottle, after taking It with the‘‘Pleasant Pellets.” I commenced to get better. I never kmw vs hat happiness was, for 1 was always tick.and complaining and malie others as well as myself unhappy, bo you see what a debt I owe you! Dr. Pierce 'sPleasant Pellets regulate stomach, liver, bowels NEWNAN HERALD NEWNAN, FIRDAY, MAY 28. BID THEM BE STILL. i fttraiffhtannd the r’old white limbs of him And laid him down —and laid him down. My h»»art waa full of the nwoet of him. I kiaaed the hnnda and the feet of him And carried him out of the town. A splendid thintt wan the death of him. His captain naid-hia captain said. Hut how could he know the worth of him? Mine waa the joy of the birth of him. And the pain, now he la dead? I hate the Hag that waa a lure tn him. So gay and high—so gay and high; The red of it ia the blood of him; How could it care for the good of him When it called him out to die? The hug lea are calling in vain to him. Bid them be at ill bid them be atilt; Minn ia the clay they have left of him. Mine, hi* mother— bereft of him By that flaunting flag on the hill I —[Katherine Atherton Grimoa. Who Lifted the Lid Off of Hell? The following scathing indictment of the German emperor was written by Elbert HuLbard and published as a sup plement to his magazine, The Philis tine, of January. That thu horrors which Mr. Hubbard saw in militarism wore afterward visited upon himself when he and hia wife went to their death among those massacred on the “Lusitania,” lends an unusually tragic note to Mr. Hubbard’s article. If any one asks, "Who lifted the lid off hell?” let the truthful answer be— William Hohenzollern. "Bill Kuiser” has a withered hand and a running ear. Also, he has a shrunken soul, and a mind that reeks with egomania. He is a mastoid degenerate of a noble grandmother. In degree he has her power, hut not her love. He has her persistence, but not her prescience. He is swollen, like a drowned pup, with a pride that stinks. He never wrote a letter nor a mes sage wherein he did not speak of God as if the Creator was waiting to see him in the lobby. "God is with us"— “God is destroying our enemies” — “1 am praying our God be with you"— “God is giving us victories”—I am ac countable only to my conscience and to God." This belief that the Maker of the Uni verse takes a special interest in him makes the man a megalomaniac; and the idea that the nations were “lying for him" is the true symptom of para noia. His talk of Slav invasion is stulo stuff, Buhtle and sly, to divert attention from his own crafty designs. Every farmer between 14 and tiO years of age has been drafted into the ranks to he food for vultures. Every farm horse that could carry a man or draw n load has been seized. All beef-cattle have been appropria ted. Every penny in every savings-b- nk in Germany has been levied upon and a “receipt" given to the starving holder. This loss of a lifetime’s savings means death to multitudes of old people, to widows, children, invalids and cripples. The money a man might have left to care for his widow, orphans, aged par ents, is swept away in the maelstrom of bloi d. Old-age pensions, sick benefits, and life insuran •«? are only dreams. We are told that the kaiser kept the peace for forty-three years. True, just waiting for this stroke nt world domin ion. Every male child horn in that forty- three yoirs, who can now carry a gun, is taken from useful work, and made to do the obscene bidding of this sad, mud, bad, bloody monster. In Germany no private individual can operate an automobile. All the oil and “petrol" has been stezed to incinerate the dead. No slab marks their resting- place; no records of the slain are kept. In Germany to-day no bands play in the public parks; all savings banks are closed; commercial banks pay only as the war minister orders; all insurance companies, both life and lire, are bank rupt; colleges are turned into hospitals, all students are at the front; factories are closed; laboratories are memories. All the progress of the last forty- three years lies a jumbled, tumbled mass of fears and tears in the dust and dirt of the gladiatorial arena. All the wealth gained in that forty-three years is already lost, dissolved in a mulch of festering human flesh. Caligula, that royal pagan pervert, was kind compared with the kaiser. Nero, the fiddling fiend, never burned property in all his pestilential career worth one-half that destroyed when the kaiser’s troops applied the torch to sto ried Louvain. What has been done before may be done again. The “Thirty Years War” reduced Germany to cannibalism. The old and crippled were knocked in the head and eaten. The nunneries were turned into com munes. Nuns, widows and girls were seized and distributed like cattle. Ev ery soldier was ordered to take two wives because the country must be re populated. Women and children toiled in the fields to raise cropB to feed the people. Family names were lost, destroyed, forgotton. A new order prevailed. To commemorate the dead was a crime. Why do the German people stand by the war lord? The answer ia easy. It is a matter of the hypnotic spell of patriotism and the lure of crowd, combined with coer cion. We make a virtue of the thing we are compelled to do. The marvelous recuperative power of the Teutonic people is proved by the fact that the German race was not wiped out of existence long ago, like the Incas or the Aztecs. The will to live was strong, and a new race was ours. Are we to go back to that black night of bloody medievalism? Surely not. Our hearts are with Ger many — the Germany of invention, science, music, education, skill—but not with the war lord. The emperor does not represent the true Germany. He symbols the lust of power, the thirst for blood. The crazy kaiser will not win. The wisdom of the world backs the allies, and Saint Helena awaits. It must be so. Germany will not be subjugated, but she will be relieved of an incubus that has threatened her very existence. 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. Ttubus, Springville, N. Y. For saie by all dealers. Crushed Him. Youth's Companion. On a transatlantic liner during a re- | cent voyage from Liverpool to New , York, there was a dapper little fellow I from London whose unlimited conceit made hi in popular with his fellow pas- I sengers. He was so ready of wit that he usually had the best of it in re- I partee. Each time, of course, he be- j came more conceited than before. It | was a bright Brooklyn school-teacher who finally wrought his downfall. One day in a sheltered spot on the deck some of the passengers were pass ing the time in playing a game of quo- tations. As they sat in a semicircle . each in turn gave a quotation begin ning with “A," the second with “B." and so on. The special point was to ' give a quotation suggested in some way by the preceding one or by the person who had given it. Chance I brought the Brooklyn school-teacht r , seventh in line, next to the young man from London. When the young man's j turn came he looked around with a I superior smile and quoted: “Frailty, thy name is woman." Tnere was an instant's hesitation; then the clear level tones of the young teacher were heard; "God made him; therefore let him I pass for a man!” The roar of laughter that followed broke up the game. For the rest or . the voyage the dapper young man | though; more and talked less. Dietary Scheme All Wrong. Dr. Christian’s clear-cut ideas on diet are, to 8By the least, conducive to good digestion. “The natural man is a healthy man; it is disease that has to be caught," he Baid, with a smile. “Look at this bill of fare. There are fewer than a dozen things that are really good food.” To a hungry man the statement was almost unbelievable, until he showed by swift, scientific analysis his reasons for the statement. “Man has drifted along for many thousand years without giving any scientific attention to his eating,” said the doctor. "Although he is entitled by inheritance to live 200 years, or about eight times his period of matur ity, the Bame as all other animals, he gives little heed to his eating until a crisis is reached.” “The three score years and ten idea is pretty well fixed,” I ventured. “It should be the average, not the maximum, age limit of man's useful ness,” he replied. “But the world is advancing—twenty-five years will see a complete revolution of ideas, when physiological chemistry and food chemistry shall have been carried to the same degree of development as is industrial chemistry to-day. Up to the present time man has tried to put into his stomach nearly everything on the face of the earth. Man has not yet learned that while nature does not de- mand exactness in eating, the penalty of too many mistakes is trouble, which ac counts for the fact that about 90 per cent, of all human disease originates in the stomach. A coat now and then of DXVIs' Old Colony Wagon Faint preserves your wagons and turm implements and makes them Iwk like new. ASK YOUR DEALER. Plumbers prefer the piping times of peace. Sort: 014 Sorts, Otter Ber.eoies Won't Curt l he rirsi case*. r.o matter of ho^ Jon* swn i-.n$. are cured by tne wonderful, old reliable Dr. Porter's Antiseptic Healing Oil. It relieves Pam oiul Li cals at the same time. l£c, 50c, I LOO. GOOD NEWS. Many Newnan Readers Have Heard it and Profited Thereby. "Gixjd news travels fast,” and bad back sufferers in Newnan are glad to learn where relief may be fourd. Many a lame, weak and aching back is bad no more, thanks to Doan’s Kidney pills. Our citizens are telling the good news of their experience with this tested remedy. Here is an example worth reading: Mrs. J. M. Crowe, trained nurse, 30 Salbide street, Newnan, says: I have seen Doan’s Kidney Pills used with Buch good results that I always recom mend them to anyone I hear complain ing of kidney trouble and they always prove beneficial. I consider them a medicine of merit and don’t hesitate to recummend them to anyone troubled by any symptoms of kidney complaint, such as backache, headache, dizziness or irregular passages of the kidney secretions.” Price 50c., at ail dealers. Dont sim ply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan’s IKidney Pills —the same that Mrs. Crowe recommends. Foster- Milburn Co , Props., Buffalo, N. Y. Our '‘Jitney” Offer—This and 5c. Don't miss this. Cut out this slip, enclose with 5c. to Foley & Co., Chica go, III., writing your name and address clearly. You will receive in return a trial package containing Foley’s Honey and Tar Compound, for coughs, colds and croup; Foley’s Kidney Pills, for pains in sides and back, rheumatism, headache, kidney and bladder ailments; and Foley’s Cathartic Tablets, a whole some and thoroughly cleansing cathar tic. Stout people enjoy them. J. F. Lee Drug Co. Agriculture in the South. Omaha Bee. The planters of the South are to be come farmers, and King Cotton is to share his throne with King Corn and other representatives of the royal line of the agricultural realm. The presi dent of the Cotton Congress, speaking to the Southern Commercial Congress, gave thanks that the war has taught the South the value of the diversifica tion of crops. This knowledge has been in possession of the Southern planter for generations, but the wis dom of applying it is just dawning The war has merely served to em phasize the point so that it will be more fully appreciated. Other sections of the country had to learn the lesson long ago, and prosperity has followed where it has been into practice. No reason exists for the South to abandon cotton as its leading crop nor will the uses for this staple be ma terially lessened by reason of the war, but the Southern farmer will be bene fited if he learns from his Northern brother the lesson of diversity, which is generally taught by adversity. - — — Chamberlain’s Liniment. This preparation is intended especial ly for rheumatism, lame back, sprains and like ailments. It is a favorite with people who are well acquainted with its splendid qualities. Mrs. Charles Tan ner, of abash, Ind.. says of it: “1 have found Chamberlain’s Liniment the best thihg for lame back and sprains 1 have ever used. It works like a charm and relieves pain and soreness. It has been used by others of ray family as well as myself for upwards of twenty years.” 25 and 50 cent bottles. For sale by all dealers. The oldest horse that served the country in the War of the Rebellion is still alive, at the age of 53 years, at Horsehead, N. Y. It is owned by P. A. McIntosh who is also a veteran of the same war. To prove this assertion Mr. McIntosh shows the Government brand on the animal's hip, which reads "I. C., 1SS5.” Horse and man served in the same regiment. Although bent with age, his hair turning gray and his teeth becoming worn, the old war horse is still able to eat 12 quarts of oats and take his master to'town several times a week. It is estimated the animal is 53 years old. Farmers cay the average life of a hor^e is about fifteen years. They Are 70 Years Old. “For some time past my wife and myself were troubled with kidney trou ble," writes T. B. Carpenter, Harris burg. Pa. "Wo suffered rheumatic pains all through the body. The first few doses of Foley's Kidney Pills relieved us. After taking five bottles between us we are entirely cured. Although we | are both in the seventies we are as vig orous as we were thirty years ago." Foley's Kidney Pills stop sleep-disturb ing bladder weakness, backache, rheu matism. dizziness, swollen joints and sore muscles. J. F. Lee Drug Co. A fish peddler was whipping his slow but patient horse in a residential stnet the other day, and crying his wares a; intervals. “Fresh mackerel. Fresh mackerel. ” A woman, seeing his acts of cruelly, put her head out of the window, and called to him: "Have you no mercy?" “No, mum.” he replied; "nothin’ but mackerel. ” A girl may not be able to keep a se cret. but she can keep a young man guessing. Let Us Hot Despoil. The edifice of international law, that fabric reared by the efforts of states men through centuries of war and peace, lies in ruins. For the momen there is no law of nations. Brute force rules. Let us not despair. Law is the moat invincible thing in the world, It is not grounded in external might; it is grounded in the essential nature of the mind and conscience of mankind. It may be ignored, but not destroyed. Violence, after ali, is the weakest thing in the world. The stars in their courses fight for law. The edifice of international law will be re-erected; new sanctions will be provided; the excesses of the very madness of world strife will be rep robated by the common conscience of the race. The more inexcusable the outrages of the present hour the surer the reaction and the securer the feet of those who will follow the ways of E eace in centuries yet unborn. — St. ouis Republic. For Coughs That "Hang On." Lingering colds, bronchial coughs, la grippe colds and similar ailments that “hang on” until May are likely to last all summer if not cured. Foley’s Honey and Tar Compound will allay inflamma tion, clear stopped passages, relieve distressing discharges at the source, banish stuffy, wheezy breathing and heal and soothe raw nasal and bronchial passages. It is prompt in action; safe and sure. Contains no opiates. J. F. Lee Drug Co. “I don’t see why you call your place a bungalow," said Smith to his neigh bor. “Well, if it isn’t a bungalow, what is it?” said the neighbor. "The job was a bungle and I still owe for it." 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 me 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 me 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. Lamborn, Bollefontaine, Ohio. Nervous, weak, tired, worn-out wo men should take Mrs. Lnmborn’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 makes it so efficient in all such cases. JOHN R. CATES DRUG CO., Newnan His Back Hurt When He Stooped Automatic On. Cook Stove “Juit the on* box of Foley Kidney Pill* re lieved my backache.- J, W. Etna, Etris, Ga. "Last year I was suffering with a terrible backache." writes J. W. Etris cf Etris, Ga. "Every time Id lean or stoop over or to one side, I'd have a painful catch in my back just over my kidneys. I tried medicines with no good results. I bought a bottle of Foley Kidney Pills, and just the one box entirely relieved my backache. It has been some time since I took them, so I think I am well." Weakened, overworked, stnpperl-up kidneys cause stiff joints, sore mus cles. rheumatism, sleep disturbing bladder ailments, biliousness and various other ills. Foley Kldnev Pills are a scientific medicine, compounded to clear the kidneys and restore them to healthy action by dissolving and driving out of the system the waste products and poisons that cau.-i kidney trouble a:nl bladder ailments. You will like their tonic and restor ative action, ready efl.ee; and quick good results. For Sal.-by J. F. LEE DRUG CO.. Newnan. Ga. Many People In This Town never really enjoyed a meal until we advised them to take a D y s P e PS‘a l&XCVUU Tablet before and after each meal. Sold only by us—25c a box. John R. Cates Drug Co. See our new automatic oil cook stove. You will want it when you see it. No wicks to keep clean. Burners close up to oven will heat hotter, cook quicker. See demonstration of cooking going on in our window now. When passing ask to see the new stove. JOHNSON HARDWARE CO. TELEPHONE 81, NEWNAN, GA. * '^Y /'ll/* Go to vj - ■ v Tvhpp ib§ wm Of/ - the Georgia MB Coast, near Savannah “Where Ocean Breezes Blow. ” Low Ten Day* Week-End, Sunday and Season Fares. Central of Georgia Railway The Right Way, T. S. PARROTT 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., Ouer H. C. Glover Co. 0 0 0 Oliver Chilled Plows 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 O jj B. H. KIRBY HARDWARE COMPANY 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. •phone 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4) 4) 4) 4) 4) 45 CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RAILWAY CO CURRENT SCHEDULES. ARRIVE FROM Griffin. lOtfi; A. m. Chattanooga 1:4.1 p. M. Cedartown 6:43 A. M. Columbus 9:40 a m. DEPART FOR 7:17P.M. Griffin 8:45a.m. 1:40 p.»- Chattanooga 11 :o I A. a. „ Cedartowu 7:2»i p. M. 6:36 P. M. Columbus .7ma.il S:1#p * DR.KINO’S NEW DISCOVERY Will Surely Stoo The* Couch. Dr.King’sIMew LifePlllfi The best I" 1 --■--'H,