The Newnan herald. (Newnan, Ga.) 1915-1947, July 02, 1915, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

NEWNAN HERALD NEW N AN, FIR D A Y , JULY 2. ONE DOLLAR A TEAR IN ADVANCE. When the Fanner Comes to Town. the farmer when that he feels Or is he made Milton County New*. How du yuu Kreel he comes to town? Is your greeting such that he is not one of us' to feel that he is in town, among his people, and with his frienus? The making or the marring of the town depends greatly upon your atti tude toward the farmer when he fa vors us with his visits. He is the backbone of the commu nity, and without his aid and encour agement we would he an unsuccessiul business community. The townsman is no better than the man from the farm, and the farmer can claim no superiority over the towns man. We Bre all human beings, with the same aims and purposes in lile, en dowed with the same braridB of in telligence. In fact, we are brothers of u com mon community, the only difference be ing that the one lives in town, where life is a little more diversified, while the other breathes (lod'B pure air in the green fields of the country. Let us remember that we are broth ers, and sisters, and cousins, and that the welfare of the one is vitul to the success of the other. When we ride out into the country the farmer extends the hand of fellow ship, bids us welcome, and hands ub a hearty "come again." It is a delightful characteristic of the man from the farm, for his greeting is sincere and his invitation is from the heart. But what of us when the farmer comes to town? Is our welcome on the same high plane as his? Is he made to feel and realize that our smile iB for him, and not for the contents of his purse? We of the town are proud of the farmers of this community, and of their wivts and their daughters. They are men and women of a high order uf intelligence, whose integrity ia beyond question, and whose thrift, and energy, und perseverance is trans forming our countryside into a hive of industry und wealth. They are builders, one and all. But we fear that we of the lown are often forgetful of the great duty that we owe to them for their loyalty and generosity in support of the local busi ness community. We ourselves know of the high re gard in which we hold the farmers of the community, but we doubt if the farmer knows of the warm sentiments which we entertain towurd him. And this is because we think much and aay too little. It should not be so. Let us of the town cultivate a more friendly and neighborly spirit, let us open up our hearts that the farmer may look within, for we are but one big family und should dwell-together in unity and brotherly love. Let us act as we feel, and give the farmer to understand that he is of us, as well ns with us. We need each other, for a prosperous farming community makes a live town, and the prosperity of the town adds life and enjoyment to the countryside. There are women who live to dresF, and the more frtquent and radical the changes are the better they like it. If their pocketbooks can stand It no great harm is done. But the great majority of women can’t afford to keep up with this pace. The result is that some stay at heme because their clothes are not in the latest style, many are made un happy, and others keep up with the procession it matters not what the cost, If a mun can wear the same suit for eight or ten years and not look like a freak why is it not possible to design an evening gown for a woman that will be in good style as long ub it may be worn? It is absurd to hear a woman say, "1 haven't a thing to wear," wfi« n •he may have half a dozen gowns all in good condition, —Leslie's Weekly. Beauty may be only skin deep, but it is nearly always effective. A WISE CHOICE. A Newnan The June Brides. G**>. Fitch. June bridpR form une of the principal products of the justly celebrated month which we are now inhaling with deep pleasure. No month approaches June in the turning of blithe and happy maidens into flushed and heated young married women, gazing wilh fear upon a cake which is threatening to explode at any minute. From the first to the thirtieth of June countless thousands of American girls will place their slim white-gloved hands in the perspiring paw of an equal number of American young men and will conduct them to the church and into matrimony wilh firm steps. By July the available crop of brides will be practically exhausted, and the min isters of the country will have to de pend upon raising cnickens for their pin money until the fall rush sets in. Nobody knows why June is so exces sively matrimonial, hut the scientific in vestigator can discover many highly suspicious reasons. In the first place, vast numbers of young women get out of college and high schools in this ‘month, and the young men who have been saving up money for the furniturt decline to wait any longer. In the second place, rice, roses and wedding trips are cheaper in June, and coal hills do not look so depressing. In the third place, the girl who be comes a housewife in this month has until December to learn how to build the tires in the morning. The flowers and sunshine of June are very beautiful, hut not so beautiful as the young woman who stands under a Niagara of gauze veiling holding a 4- pound bouquet in one arm and promises to do her best to make a paradise out of a 6 room cottage for the reBt of her life. People go to June weddings to see this sight with great enthusiasm. They ought, to go with equal vim to tar and feather the human catastrophe who takes a beautiful and smiling bride out of a church in June and sends her into court a few years luter, worn and bat tered, to trade her hopes for a divorce certificate. Gazing at the radiant June bride we are of the firm opinion that the fathers of this country are to > civilized when it comes to arguing with sons-in-law who do not make good as sumples of civili zation. Makes Money by Growing Alfalfa. Home Tribune-Horultl. According to the statement of J. H. Foster, Floyd county’s capable and en ergetic farm adviser, it pays to grow alfalfa and grain in this county. He cites ns an instance Mr. S. ,1. Whatley, who farms Hbout ten miles from Rome. Mr. Whatley h»H four acres planted in alfulfa, and has already made a second cutting. He will get two more crops, and when he does, judging by the two already harvested, the land will have brought him $125 an acre. His crop averages tight loads of about 2,000 pounds each, and when converted into hay will make from five to six tons. The present price of this hay exceeds $20 a ton. Mr. Whatley has also planted oats, of which he will harvest 75 bushels to the acre. He has sixty head of cattle to eat his hBy, and he is little concerned about the price of cotton. Mr. Foster says that all Floyd county farmers who have planted grain and properly prepared the land will have good crops. A boy 12 years of age—n member of the corn club —now has corn knee-high to an average man. On the acre he is cultivating he used 800 pounds of fer tilizer. Not (or Men Only. Foley's Cathartic Tablets are not ns insistently demanded by women as by men, because this particular cathartic is not %o well known among women Women suffer as much as men do from indigestion and constipation, and they also require this scientific remedy to keep the stomach sweet, the liver ac tive and the bowels regular. Foley's Cathartic Tablets are wholesome and thoroughly cleansing: do not gripe or cause nausea. Stout people say this is the one cathartic ttrnt takes away that over full and clogged up feeling. J. F. Lee Drug Co He Made Man Rroves No Mistake. A hotel man is more subject to th recommendation of his patrons than almost any other business man, but Mr. Lewis selected Doan’s Kidney Fills when suffering from kidney- trouble. To prove that he made no mistake in his choice, he given n signed report of his satisfactory experience. Read it : W i’. Lewis, proprietor Virginia Ho tel, Washington street, Newnan, (.la. says: "My kidneys wen- out iff unit and 1 suffered from a lame and aching hack. I felt tired and dull, especially in the morning. The kidney secretions passed irregularly, sometimes being too frequt nt and then again scanty ni-d pain ful. 1 used six or seven boxes of 1 loan's Kidney's Fil.s and they cured me of all signs of kidney trouble. 1 have had | no return of the complaint since.” Price fOr. at all dealers. Don't sim ply ask fora kidney remedy—get Doan Kidney Fills the same that Mr. Lewi: hod Foster-Milburn Co., Props., Buf falo, N, V. If You are troubled with heartburn, gases and a distressed feeling after eating take a Dyspepsia Tablet before and ufter each meal and you will obtain prompt relief. Sold only by us,25o John R. Cates Drug Co. Injustice to the Railroads. The plarinf? injustice of the Govern- I rnent's tri-atment of the railroads in the matter of carry the mails is brought j out in a comparison of what Uncle Sam j pays his own road and what he pay- oth»rs. The Government-owned Puna-I ma railroad received last rear, accord ing to a statement by the committee on railway mail pay, $2 77 for each ton of j mail carried a mile, while the private roads in the United States, according to estimates of the Postoflice Depart ment, received about Hi cents per ton for each mile. If this is the kind of extravagance the Government owner ship of railroad stands for, it will he a long while before the voters of this country will give it seriouB considera tion. Had the privately owned rail roads of the Unittd States been paid on the same basis as the Panama rail road, instead of receiving $56,<iOO,000 or about one-fifth of the Postoifice De partment revenues, they would have received $1,557,000,000, or more than live times the total revenues of the de partment. The railroads have not asked Congress to advance mail pay rates. All they have asked is to be paid for all ihe mail they carry and for all the special facilities and services they furnish the J’ostoffice Department. Advertise Your Goods. Don’t imagine for a moment that advertising won’t bring you results in your immediate field. This is an error that many merchants make when they assure themselves that th< ir store is so well known that it doesn't require newspaper advertising—that the trade will naturally drift his way anyhow. There isn't a store anywhere in the world that has so secure a foot- ting as that —not a single store —and you are not doing business in so profit able a field hut that your sales can be increased by careful newspaper adver tising. If this is not true, why is it that a stream of mail orders is con stantly going out of your town to catalogue houses? And are not these sales made by the catalogue houses the resplt of persistent apvertising In the very field you feel that >ou have culti vated to the limit? Whenever you get such an idea fixed in your mind, and really believe that there is nothing more to cor.quer, you are simply turning i ver ready money to the man that does possess the broader vision—you are ceding territory and rights to others that careful newspaper advertising would retain in your possession. A Word to Boys. Th«» Bit? Brother. Young man, there is one thing you cannot do. You cannot make a success in life unless you work. Belter men than you have tried it and failed. You can’t loaf around the streets, smoke ci garettes, tell foul stories, drink whis key and sponge on somebody else with out making a failure in life. You must learn a trude or get into some honest business. If you don’t you will be a chronic loafer, despised by all, produc ing nothing, simply making yourself a burden on your parents or the State. There is no place in the world for loafers. The ripe fruit is all at the top of the tree. You must climb to get it. If you wait for it to fall at your feet you will never get it. Smarter men will jump up and get it all. Move. Do something, no matter how small. It will be a starter. Help yourself ar.d others will help you. There is no royal road to success. Toil, grit and endur ance, these are the requisites. Wake up and see what you can do. The curate of a fashionable church w is endeavoring to teach the signifi- cince of white to a Sunday-school class. "Why,” said he, "does a bride in variably desire to be clothed in white at her marriage?” As no one answered he explained: "White," he said, "stands for joy, and the wedding day is the mos joyous occasion of a wo man's life.” A small boy queried: "Why do the men all wear black?” Tom Hood Brought Up to Date. Lamar Mo.) K^publlcar.-Sentinel. I remember, I remember the house j where I was horn: the little window i where the sun came peeping in at j morn. You'd hardly know the old I place now, for dad is up to date, and I the farm is scientific fiom the I ack to ! the gate. The house and the barn are 1 lighted with bright acetylene, the en gine in the laundry is run by gasoline; we have silos, we have autos, we have dynamos and things, a telephone for gossip and a phonograph that sings. The hired man has left us—we miss his homely face; a lot of college gradu ates are working in his place. Thete's an engineer and fireman, a chauffeur and a vet,, 'lectrician and a mechanic. Oh, the farm’s run right, you bet. The little window where the sun came peeping in at morn now brightens up a bath-room that cost a car of corn. Our milkmaid iB pneumatic and she's sani tary, too, but dad gets fifteen cents a quart for milk that once brought two. Our cattle came from Jersey, and the hogB are all Duroc; the sheep are Southdown beauties and the chickens Plymouth Rock. To have the best of everything, that is our aim and plan, for dad not only farms it, but he’s a business man. Information Wanted. The Argonaut. It was the mayor of a Western city who received the following inquiry from an Eastern resident: "Kind and Respected Cir: I Eee in a paper that a man named John Sipes was atacted and et up by a bare whose cubs he was trying to git when the she bare came up and stopt him by eating him up in the mountains near your town. What I want to know is, did it kill him or was he only partly et up, and is he from the place and all about the bare? 1 don’t know but what he is a distant husband of mine. My first husband was of that name and I sup posed he was kilted in the war, and, the name of the man the bare et being the same, I thought it might be him after all, and I ought to know it if he wasn’t killed either in the war or by the bear, for I have been married twice since, and there ought to be divorce papers got out by him and me. He sings base and has a spread eagle tatoed on his front chest and a anker on his right arm, which you will know him by if the bare did not eat up these sines of it’s being: him. If alive, don’t tell him 1 arn married to Joe White, for he never did liked Joe. Mebbe you'd better let on as if I'm ded; that is if the bare din not eat him all up. If it did, I don’t see as yo do anything, and you needn’t take no trouble. Please ancer back. “P. S. — Was the bare kilted? Also, was he married agin, and did he leave any property wuth me laving claim to?’’ Some time ago Brown rushed into the kitchen where his wife was bossing the preparation of the evening hash. In one of his fists he was holding his other hand, while a cussy expression was floating over his features. "Where is that antiseptic salve, Min nie?” he demanded. "That infernal parrot of yours has bitten a chunk out of my hand!" "What’s that, Jimmy!” exclaimed wifey, with a look of concern. "Do you mean to say that he bit a piece all the way out of your hand?" "That’s what he did,” answered James. "Clean as a whistle. Where did you say that salve was?" "Oh, Jimmy,” returned wife in a complaining voice, “I do wish you would be more careful. You know the bird dealer told me not to let that par rot taste meat under any circumstan ces.” To Drive Out Malaria And Build Up The System Take the Old Standard GROVE’S TASTELESS chill TONIC. You know what you are taking, as the formula is printed on every label, showing it is Quinine and Iron in a tasteless form. The Quinine drives out malaria, the Iron builds up the system. 50 cents Blood Remedy That Works in the Tissues Ths Very Latest Theory About Row and Why the Bipod is Disordered. S. S. S. Means Pure Blood Which Insures Long Life and Health. The edition of the New York tele phone directory has reached more than 600,000 copies. Whenever You Need a Oeneral Tonic Take Grove's The Old Standard Grove’s Tasteless chill Tonic is equally valuable as a General Tonic because it contains the well known tonic propertiesof QUININE and IRON. It acts on the I.iver, Drives ' out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and j Builds up the Whole System. 50 cents. The great experts In Chemistry and rhyslology now declare what has all along been contended by the Swift Lab oratory that the germs of blood disorders find lodgment in the interstices of the tis sues. And herein Is where S. S. S. goes to work rapidly, effectively and with won derfully noticeable results. This famous blood purifier contains medicinal components Just as vital and essential to healthy blood ns the nutritive elements of wheat, roast beef, and fats and the sugars that make up our daily ration. As a matter of fact there is one ingre dient In S. S. S. which serves the active purpose of stimulating each cellular part of the body to the healthy and judicious selection of its own essential nutriment. That is why it regenerates the blood sup- ply: why it has such a tremendous in fluence in overcoming eczema, rash, pim ples, and all skin afflictions. And in regenerating the tissues S. g. s has a rapid and positive antidotal effect upon all those Irritating influences that cause rheumatism, sore throat, weak eyes, loss of weight, thin pale cheeks, and that weariness of muscle and nerve that is generally experienced, by all sufferers with poisoned blood. Get a bottle of s. s. S. at any drug store, and In a few days you will not only feet bright, and energetic, but you will be the picture of new life. S. S. S. is prepared only In the labors- tory of the Swift Specific Co., 201 Swift Bldg, Atlanta, Ga. Who maintain a very efficient Medical Department, where all who have any blood disorder of a stub born nature may write freely for advice. S. S. S. is sold everywhere by all drug stores. Beware of all attempts to sell you something "Just as good.” Insist upon S. S. S. SAVE MONEY TIME AND LABOR Have real convenience in vour kitchen If women knew how econom ical, and Low easy to operate— how dependable is the Mndr in four size.®: One, two, thrt-e ai.d four burners. A blessing to housekeepers. Al- ways rtady fur instullt use. DAVIS’ CARRIAGE PAINTS are colors ground in tough, elastic Coach Varnish and one coat will main- ynur faded automobile nr carriage look like now. They are easy to apply and dry wi’h a strong, hign, gloss-clinching enam-l finish Made for wear and tear ASK YOUR DEALER. MPIRFECT1QN OilCookStove —every woman would certainly have one in her kitchen. They are absolutely safe and reliable—any ordinary cook cun get perfect results from the New Perfection Oil Cook Stove. They have every advantage over ordinary stoves that can possibly be claimed for any stove. Heat instantly to any degree wanted. No soot, smoke, ashes nor odor. Cook Book Free with each New Perfection Oil Cook Stove, Fob Sale By Eaider.-CErrp Hew. Cc. arc B. H Kirby Hdw. Co., Newnan, Hogansville Hardware Co., Hogansville, Ga. Write for Booklet STANDARD OIL CO., - ATLANTA, OA. Incorporated in Kentucky. Panama Pacific Exposition Opened Feb. 20 SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. Closes Dec. 4 Panama California Exposition Opened Jan. 1 SAN DIEGO, CAL. Closes Dec. 31 $71.90 Round Trip Fare $95.00 From Atlanta via s 0UTHERN RAILWAY “PREMIER [CARRIER OF THE SOUTH” $71.10 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 2 to Nov. 30, inclusive. Final return limit three months from date of sale, not to exceed Dec. 31, 1915. STOP OVERS permitted at all po nts ongoing or return trip. SIDE TRIPS may be made to Sante 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 ti 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 ageht, or address R. L. BAYLOR, D. P. A. J. C. BEAM, A. G. P. A. Atlanta, Gemgia Ulan,Jeorgit