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NEWNAN HERALD
NEWNAN'. FIR DA Y ,
J U LY 9.
ONE DOLLAR A
YEAR
IN ADVANCE.
—
Mr. Buy Grub and His Pitiful Plight.
Prom «*»•)¥• Fafm»r.
Since thin ib to apply only to farmem
—real anti imitation-everybody else
will please to "Bland aside," And as
Mr. Buy Grub's ease is the most ur
gent, we will attend to Ilia first
Mr. Buy Grub is generally a "one-
crop" man, but bis one crop is not al
ways a money crop, though he plants
and cultivates it with that end in view.
He iB the man who makes it necessary
for one line of the country merchants'
letter heads to read: "Dealer in Sta
ple and Fancy Groceries." He is the
man who doesn't know Where his next
meal is coming from, nor where his
laet one came from, for that matter.
But if he has the cash or credit to buy
a few meals ahead we would find that
they came from about everywhere in
the U. S. A. His flour very likely
corm-H from Minnesota, his corn from
Illinois, his potatoes from Maine, his
beans from Michigan, his oried fruit
from California, his canned goods from
Maryland and his meat from any one
of a dozen different places. For every
single one of these articles of food Mr.
Buy Grub is paying at least twice whut
it would cost him to raise them on his
own farm. If I were asked the old
question,--"who pays the ireight," I'd
point my finger straight at Mr. Buy
Grub.
Thifl same Mr. Buy Grub is the man
who ib guilty of keeping the South
away down toward the bottom flnan
cialiy for all these years, and this too
in spite of the assertion of the first, ex
plorers who declared our country to be
"The fairest the Buri ever shone upon,"
in spite of the fact that we are blessed
above ull others in climate, long grow
ing seasons, rainfall and other natural
advantages.
Mr. Buy Grub can't afford to fool
with such a little thing as a gurden, or
if lie plants one the weeds and grass
hoppers soon have full possession of it.
Of course he doesn't read th< farm pa
pers. They have too much to say about
diversified (arming and he doesn’t be
lieve in such stuff. Why, the kind of
farming the papers advocate would
keep him busy about 12 months in the
year, and Mr. Grub likes to loaf on the
job about one-third of the time.
Now let’s have a look ut Mr. L.ive-at-
Humc. He lines better thun any king
on earth. In fuel, all the regular king
jobs of the Eastern Hemisphere could
go hang for ull of him. 'He und his
family are contented und prosperous,
and neither the "high cost of living"
nor the "upward trend of prices" is
worrying him a mite.
Of course tins condition did not come
about by Mr. Live-at-Home sitting
down und dreaming, nor did he bring it
about by waving ttie magician's magic
wand. He knows that everything
comes to him who waits, if he hustles
while he wuits, so he gets up early in
the morning and hustles und he keeps
this up pretty regularly 12 months in
the year. lie grows his own hogs und
apple pie and has very little business to
transact in the grocery store, except to
tell his surplus products.
Mr. Live-at-Home has learned the
value of a good garden and orchard and
acta accordingly. He bus something
either fresh or canned, on the table :itS5
days in the year, and it is not the stale,
wilted stuff that has been picked over
for a week either.
Mr. Live ut-Home keeps one or more
good cows to supply the milk, cream
and butter so necessary for the proper
development of growing boys and girls.
Mr. Buy Giub couldn't keep a cow,
because the cow isn't built to manufac
ture milk out of the stuff' he raises on
bis farm.
Benefited by Chamberlain's Lini
ment.
"Last winttr 1 used Chamberlain's
Liniment lor rhtumutic pains, stiffness
anil soreness ol the knees, anti can con-
sctenttously say that 1 never used any
thing that dm me so much good."—Ea
waru Cratt, Elba, N. Y. Obtainable
every wmere.
LONE OAK. THE WHY__0F WORRY.
(Brought over from last week.) Tho.e Who Live Only In the Pre.ent
Mrs. Mozi Turner and daughters, Have No p ear 0 f the Future.
MisseB Bible and iiuth, spent several \\- t , worry because we are afraid of
days in Newnan lafit week, the guests something. Worry ts fear of the con
of Mrs. Turner's sister. Mrs. .I. F. Nall, sequences of something that lots oc-
()n their return they were accompanied eurred or something Unit may Happen,
by Miss Mary Naff, who will spend A curious thing about it u that It Is
Rome time with Lone Oak relatives. Dever associated with the immediate
Mrs. C. S. Culpepper, with her little ; " '« generally In the future.
though rometitiH-s lu the pui-L
daughters, Virginia and Evelyn, spent
the week-end in Newnan with her
sister. MrB. Carl Hamrick.
Misses Margaret Herring and HildB
JuRtiss, of Grantville, were guests of
relatives in Lone Oak on Sunday last.
As a delegate from the Lone Oak
auxiliary to the district missionary
meeting, Mrs. J. S. Herring spent last
Wednesday in Grantville.
Miss Inez Spence is spending the
week with her aunt, Mrs. John Frank
Bass, in Hogansville.
Mrs. Harlan Watkins, who repre
sented the Whitesburg auxiliary at the
district missionary meeting in Grant
ville, was a guest in the home of her ! Persons nfflloted will be less worried
brother, Mr. W. P. Sewell, last Thurs- about thetr condition than relatives or
friends wbo sympathize wltb them. A
person may worry In auticlputlon of
a sickness or operation, but when they
hnve the sleknesH or the operation ts
terly conference to the district meeting p er f r ,rmed. the worry disappears, and.
which convened there Tuesday night. though they may fear, they cannot
Animals and babies wbo are con
scions of nothing but the present can
not worry. As all creatures, except
human beings, live only for the mo
ment. they do not worry because they
have no recollection of what lias hap
pened and can form no conception of
what may happen.
Human beings having the capacity
j to look back or forward, mentally, are
stisceptible to the fbitr that causes
I worry, and. as most persons live more
! In the past or future than In the pres-
! ent. this tendency affects for worry
or not. according to our viewpoint of
life In other respects. Worry Is mental
I fear of an Impending something.
day night.
Mr. J. F. Prickett left to-day for Pal
metto, being a delegate from the quar-
Miss Larue Wise visited her cousins,
Misses Emma Lizzie and Estelle
Phillips, in Hogansville, last week.
MiHses Annie Ruth Wise and Louise
Maxwell will return to-day from a visit
of some dayR to Hogansville relatives.
Mcsdames J. T. Latimer and G. G.
worry In the present-—Boston Hernia.
BEST PAYING RAILROAD.
It's • Little One. Built of Scrap Iron
on Wooden Rails.
The railrond that pays the biggest
Culpepper, who visited the family of dividends on the capital invested tR,
Mr. James E. Culpepper in Lutherville according to tlie Technical World mag-
yesterday afternoon, -report the condi- 1 azlne. the Grand Island railroad. It ts
tion of Mrs. Feriby Culpepper as unim- * n northern Alberta. Canada. 200 miles
. from auy trunk line or feed
pr “ v ® ‘ i It Is only a quarter of a mile long
The relatives of Mr. E C Culpepper nn(J bu , )t of gernp lroB , )u woode *
feel somewhat encouraged by reports , rtl || s | tg ro ||ing stock consists of two
from his physician at Hot Springs, battered freight cars, which are pusli-
Ark. ’ ' .... ...
ed along the road by the Inen who ship
the freight, no locomotives being used.
The freight that is handled on this
road consists principally of furs, which
are towed up the Athabnska river on
scows hauled by men. are laden on
the cars, pushed down the railroad and
. , shipped again on other scows, therebv
friends promotes mutual acquaintance j clrciuiiveutlllg the dnn(;erous Grnncl
and the kindly feeling that is the result rapids. Returning, the scows carry all
The picnic last Friday on the banks
of a limpid stream near the home of
Mr. W. R. Lee gave occasion for a
large and pleasant gathering of conge
nial people—young, old and middle-aged.
Such commingling of neighbors and
of knowing one another, and it were
well if they were m ire frequent.
June 30th.
Two Ways of Fighting the Boll
Weevil.
Savannah Ncwh.
Dr. Worsham, State Entomologist,
has again warned the cotton-growerB of
the State that the boll wevil is moving
on Georgia, and that unless the proper
methods for combatting it are adopted
it will do tremendous damage in this
State as in those it has been ravaging.
It is relieving to know that there are
methods of fighting it that will make
its ravages in Georgia, when it does
break over the western line, much less
than other parts of the cotton belt
have suffered. That putB squarely up
to the cotton farmers the question of !
whether or not they are going 10 feed
the pest without a fight or fight it to
the last boll.
There are two ways to fight it. Both |
should be adopted. One is to follow the
instructions of the State Department of
Agriculture in the selection of cotton
seed, the planting of cotton and ttie
actual hand-to-hand fighting, as it were,
with the pest, and the other is to give
more attention to other crops than cot
ton, so that it cannot eat up the farm
er's whole profits, even if it does run
amuck in his cotton field. It is good
strategy to diversify crops, and it is
good tactics to plant early-maturing
cotton. Good generalship is necessary
if the weevil is be controlled.
Some men are so thick that they
seem to be immune from temptation.
The paint that is CHEAP per gallon is
HEAR per job.
sorts of freight for the Hudson Bay
company’s factors and are Homed down
the river
The Hudson Bay company charges
$2.50 a ton for nil freight on tills little
rallroml, and the shipper must handle
Ills own goods and push the cars him
self.
Where l£a«t Seems West.
Those who have crossed the line into
the southern regions of our globe are
nwnre that In Chile the sun seems to
rise in the west and set In the east.
In spite of knowing tfie contrary to lie
the fact, it is well nigh impossible to
shake off the strange illusion. And
tills because our senses conspire to tell
Us the reverse. As in uorth temperate
latitudes the sun never attains the
zenith til Its Phoebus driven course,
we Instinctively face the sunward half
of the sky when we look south and be
low the equator, and we are abetted
in our deception by the cold winds
which blow, as at home, from the o[s
posite quarter To all our senses uorth
is south and south north The suu. ris
ing on our right to set upon bur left,
seems therefore to travel daily hack-
ward from west to east in a thorough
ly upsetting way.— Pervical Lowell In
Youth's Companion.
Dome ol tne Rock.
The mime ''Duuie or the Rock" is
one that has been eouferred ou the
celebrated uio-qiie ot Omar, at .leru
salem It stands on Mount Mormh.
on the site once occupied oy the tern
pie of Solomon Immediately under
Its dome an UTegubu shaped rook pro
Jeers above the pavement flits rock
was the scene ot inanj Si-riptlirai
events and has lieeu greatly revered
tor ages by Jews and Mohammedans
Tool*, Not Toy*.
Fllnimer—Mel t tuson downtown to
day He'd just bought a tin horn, a
triangle, some blocks, a rattle box.
some sleigh bells and a popgun I
didn’t know tie had u baby. Flnmson
— He hasn't He's u vaudeville trap
drummer Those things are part of
his outfit.—Duck
They Were Not.
A young clergyman, small of stature,
preachiug as a candidate in n certain
place one Sabbath, peering over the
pulpit Bible, announced as bis text:
“It is l Be not afraid."
Arab Horse Te*t.
A good horse, according to an Arnh
test. Is one mat cmii stand perfectly
erect upon Ids ipgs when drinking
from a shallow pool.
As we grow less young the aged
grow less old — Bacon,
Miniature Cattle.
The smallest cows in the world are
found in the Samoan islands. The
average weight does not exceed ISO
pounds, while the bulls weigh about
200 pounds. They are about the size
of a Merino sheep.
Keep Up the Fight.
This alone is thy concern, to fight
manfully, and never, however mani
fold thy wounds, to lay down thine
arms, or to take to flight.—Lorenzo
Scupoli.
Early Slave-Holding State.
Maryland was an early slave-hold
ing colony, for in 10-12 Governor Cal
vert bargained with a certain ship
master for the delivery of 13 African
“slaves."
Same Thing.
Doctor—“You must go away for a
long rest." Overworked Merchant—
“But, doctor I’m too busy to get
away." Doctor—"Well, then, you must
stop advertising."
Out for the Dollars.
"I hear Rev Mr Sharpe intends to
resign from tile ministry." "Yes. He
Bays there Is no money in marrying
people, so he intends to practice law
and divorce them.''
Important Accessory, Anyhow.
The automobile people to the con
tra"' notwithstanding, the best spark
ing device continues to be a sofa, with
the lights turned low.—Judge.
Daily Thought.
Politeness appears to have been in
vented to enable people who would
naturally fall out, to live together in
peace.
may cost you u little more per gallon,
but will cost less per job than any oth
er paint made, as it will do from one-
! fourth to one-third more work, do it
Nothing worries some women like ; BETTER and last longest,
troubles that failed to develop. i ASK YOUR DEALER.
UGH! CALOMEL MAKES YOU SICK.
DON'T STAY BILIOUS, CONSTIPATED
Bermuda Fish.
There nre 21)3 species of Bermuda
flsli. hut of course ull are not edible
and many are too lusiguiticiint in size
to excite the angler But there are
quite enough large ones to make ex
citing sport for the most fastidious
fisherman. For Ashing in shallow wa
ter the native uses a dinghy, but when
he goes to the reef he travels in a
whaleboat or motorboat. In almost
every Bermuda bay one finds ponds
that are stocked with fishes that are
being fattened for the market like
Thanksgiving turkeys.—Exchange.
Force, Wi*dom and Faith.
When a human soul draws Its first
furrows straight the rest will surely
follow. Henceforth your existence be-
j comes ceaseless activity. The universe
belongs to him who wills, who knows,
who prays, but he must will, he must
know, he must pray. In a word, he
must possess force, wisdom and faith.
Be conquerors on the earth. Your con
victions will be changed to certainties.
—Houore de Balzac.
No Indication.
Because a man makes a profession
of religion is no sign that he is way
up in his profession.—Philadelphia In
quirer.
Knockers.
Sometimes it's an opportunity that
knocks Oftener it's only a man.
Optimistic Thought.
Resolutions taken without thought
bring disasters without remedy.
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
Gets Right Twist
On Rheumatism
Makes Short Work of Cleaning Out Your Entire
System—Aches and Pains Go Fast.
In S. S. S. You Get a Twist on Rheumatism that Settles It.
Many a rheumatic sufferer has oeen to
the drug store for a bottle of S. S. S. and
been handed something claimed to be
"Just as good." Truly, to ask for bread
and be given a stone is still in practice.
If you are troubled with rheumatism in
any form be sure to use S. S. S. and note
its wonderful Influence.
S. S. S. has the peculiar action of soak
ing through the intestines directly Into
the blood. In five minutes Its influence is
at work in every artery, vein and tiny
capillary. Every membrane, every organ
of the body, every emunctory becomes in
effect a filter to strain the blood of Im
purities. The stimulating properties of S.
S. S. compel the skin, liver, bowels, kid
neys, bladder to all work to the one end
of casting out every irritating, every pain-
inflicting atom of poison; it dislodges by
Irrigation all accumulations In the Joints,
causes acid uccretions to illaolve, renders
them neutral and scatters those peculiar
formations in the nerve centers that
cause such mystifying and often baffling
rheumatic pains.
And best of all this remarkable remedy
is welcome to the weakest stomach. If
you have drugged yourself until your
stomach ts nearly paralyzed, you will be
astonished to find that S. S. S. gives no
sensation but goes right to work. This is
because it is a pure vegetable infusion, is
taken naturally into your blood just as
pure air is inhaled naturally Into your
lungs.
Get a bottle of S. S. S. today, and ask
for S. S. S.
You may depend upon it that the store
that sells you what you ask for is a good
place to trade. Write to the Swift
Specific Co., 204 Swift Bldg., Atlanta, Ga.,.
for their Book on Rheumatism.
Panama Pacific Exposition
Opened Feb. 20 SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. Closes Dec. 4-
Panama California Exposition
Opened Jan. 1 SAN DIEGO, CAL. Closes Dec. 3L
$71.90 Round Trip Fare $95.00
From Atlanta via
0UTHERN RAILWAY
“PREMIER HARRIER OF THE SOUTH”
s
$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 ongoing or return trip.
SIDE TRIPS may he 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
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.
Atlanta, Georgia
J. C. BEAM, A. G. P. A.
t
\ilar,i., Georgia
It is difficult to grasp the full mean-
hg of the figures pub.ished by the
Federal Department of Agriculture on
the crop profits of the present year.
Of the thirty-eight million persons en
gaged in gainful occupations in the en
tire country, as reported in the last
census, twelve millions, or nearly one-
third, are at work on the farms. Fan
cy the increased ability to buy com
modities that unprecedented harvests
will bring to these millions. And when
they begin to buy, all the wheels of in
dustry and trade arc set in motion. The
-mire economical structure from the
toitom up is lifted. And as to money
values— it is likely that this vear’s
crops will he worth at least $10,000,-
000.000 Alongside such a sum the
$82,000,000 gold expoited to Europe
since the beginning of the year looks
like "loose change."
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 contains the
well known tonic propertiesof QUININE
and IRON. It acts on the Liver, Drives
out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and
Builds up the Whole System. 50 cents.
J M m-%r IrnLl m. mm mmif K » •
vTJT Send us vourFILMS for
\ FREE DEVELOPMENT
LOWEST CHARGE FOR HIGHEST 1
CLASS PRINTING*, ENLARGING!SEsD
FOR KODAKCATA LOG FINISHING
PRICES:EVERY HAIL ORDER RUSHED
GENUINE EASTMAN EILIi MAILED CO D
14 Whirehal lAflarvr
m
Administrator's Sale.
GEORGIA—Coweta County :
By virtue of an order grranted by the Honorable
Court of Ordinary of said county will be sold be
fore the court-house door at Newnan. Ga.. on the
first Tuesday in August. 1915, between the le
gal hours of sale, to the highest and best bidder,
the following bank stock belonging to the estate
ot S. W. Murray, deceased: Twelv/^ (12.* shares of
the capital stock of The Manufacturers National
Bar.k. of Newnan, Ga.
Sold for the purpose of paying debt* of said de
ceased. Terms of sale cash. This June?. 1915.
Pi s. fee. $3 45.
MRS. ZEBULINE H. MURRAY.
Adminis ratrix of estate of S, W. Murray, dec d.
Laundrv Lists for sale here.
“Dodson's Liver Tone" Will Clean Your
Sluggish Liver Better Than Calomel
and Can Hot Salivate.
Calomel make* you eiek you lose a
day's work. Calomel is quicksilver ami
it salivates: calomel injures your liver.
If v*ui are bilious; feel lazy, sluggish
and all knocked out. if your U’wels an'
constipated and your head aches or
Stomach is sour, just take a spoonful of
harmless Dodsons Liver lone instead
of using sickening, salivating calomel.
Dodson's Liver Tone is real liver medi
cine You'll know it next morning lo
calise vou will wake up f.vling tine,
your liver will be working, your head
ache and dizziness gone, your stomach
will la- sweet and Isolds regular. Y ou
will feel like working You'll t«- cheer
ful; full of cuvtt’J, vijjw sUw ambaiuu.
Your druggist or dealer sells you n
60 cent bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone
under my [htsoiuiI guarantee that it
will clean your sluggish liver better than
nasty calomel; it won't iiuiko you sick
m.d you van out at-..t .tig you want
without being salivate Your druggist
guarantees that inch apounful will start
your liver, clean vour bowels and
straighten you up by morning or you
got your motley back. I'hildnn gladly
take Dodson’s Liver Tone because it is
pleasant tasting and doesn’t grpe or
cramp or make tin m sick.
1 am selling millions of bottles .f
Iddson" Liver Tone t » j»oople who have
found that t’-i< pl asant. vegetable, fiver
medicine takes the place i-i dangerous
caloric.’. Pity one bottle on tuy sound,
reliable guarantee. Ask your druggist
about me.
An Illustration.
“How many men there have been
whose merits were not appreciated till
after their death." said the expert In
gloom.
“Oh. well," replied the panent person,
"that's the way it is all through nature
A turkey struts around a wtiole life
time without uny idea what it Is really
good for.”—Washington Star.
Hi* Sourc*.
"How do you suppose Noah managed
to keep his arc lights going?"
“Well, from the fact of the Boon
there must have been a stroug current
running."—Baltimore American.
To Wear Better.
Lenders—Say. I've bev-n carrying
those 1. O U.'s of yours until they are
about worn out Burrows—Sorry, old
man Next time I'll use better paper
— Boston Transcript.
J* XXXXXXXXXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXf
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
Ol Shades
A man does not please long when he
has only one species of wit—La Roche
foucauld.
give you privacy with the joys of
out o doors." Sleep, eat on your
porch!
., G,t t’il k t rn »rret:te end deep sleep
through Dr Air. who soothes nerves bdek
to health. Vudors last. You can se- ouf
but net in. They keep fresh, for they're
flamed—net pamted. We have then in
various widths. S3 to Slu wili ceulD tha
*ver«*e porch with Vudo—
Porch shades that give the best satisfaction.
The \ udor reinforced Hammocks at prices as
cheap as lower grades.
Chair Hammocks, the kind that endure.
Green and brown fibre rush porch furniture,
swings, etc.
French willowcraft furnit re, any finish.
Crex rugs and runners, any color.
All onr prices are less than they were last sea-
let’s trade on your home
son. Come now and
furnishings.
tt
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J. N. MARBURY