The Newnan herald. (Newnan, Ga.) 1915-1947, August 13, 1915, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

THE NEWNAN HERALD wfWNAN HERALD ( Consolidated with Coweta Advertiser September. 1886. ' Established 1866. ' Consolidated with Newnan News January, 1015. t NEWNAN, GA.. FRIDAY, AUGUST 13, 1915. Vol. 50—No. 46 FALL TAILORING OPENING §chloss Baltimore (^lothf.s Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Monday Aug. 19 Aug. 20 Aug. 21 Aug. 23 New Styles and Models for the Coming Season, Together With Hundreds of Smartest Fabrics Produced Here and Abroad, Shown by a Representative of SCHLOSS BROS. & no. ^ BALTIMORE NEW YORK ^ THE FAMOUS HOUSE OF WHOLESALE TAILORS Our semi-annual style-show of fine tailoring for men and young men will soon be ready for you again. Don’t miss it. It affords you the chance to get the best of classy Metropolitan Cus tom Tailoring at moderate prices. The Special SCHLOSS REPRESENTATIVE who will be here to show you the new things is an expert on styles for men. He can tell you what the best dressed men are ordering from their high-priced tailors in the largest cities, and duplicate the cut and fabric for you exactly. Come and meet him. Moderate Prices But IMo Obligation to Buy The prices asked for this unusual sort of tailoring and the exclusive fabrics shown will be very reasonable, but don’t stay away merely because you are not ready to order just yet. You will not be under the least obligation to buy if you come, and you will certainly get some ideas as to fash ion that will be worth your while. So come and see this great display. YOU ARE SPECIALLY INVITED P. F. Cuttino & Co CALOMEL DYNAMITES YOUR LIVER! MAKES YOU SICK AND SALIVATES "Dodson's Liver Tone" Starts Your Liver Better Than Calomel and You Don't Lose a Day's Work Liven up your sluggish liver! Feel fine and cheerful; make your work a pleasure; 1k> vigorous and full of ambi tion. Hut take no nasty, dangerous calomel because it makes you sick and you jnav lose a day’s work. Calomel is mercury or quicksilver which causes necrosis rof the bones. Calomel crashes into sour bile like dynamite, breaking it up. That’s when you feel that awful nausea and cramping. Listen to me! If you want to enjoy tne nicest, gentlest livef and liowel ‘'leansing you ever experienced just take a spoonful of harmless JJodaon’s Liver Tone tonight. Your druggist or dealer sells you a 50 cent bottle of Dodson’s Liver Tone under my personal money- back guarantee that each spoonful will clean your sluggish liver better than a dose of nasty calomel and that it won’t make you sick. Dodson’s Liver Tone is real liver medicine. You’ll know it next morning lK*cau8e you will wake up fooling line, your liver will lx- working; headache and dizziness gone; stomach will be sweet and bowels regular. Dodson’s Liver Tone is cnlirely vcw table, therefore' harmless and can ino salivate. Clive it to your Millions of people no ii‘.:iiy Liver 'Pone of <’ itiyrm now. Your drm'-'i;l will !• ;i ti e .-ale of Calomel is nlno. entireJv here. hihlrcj id -i 1 f FORD TOURING CAR DELIVERED, $474.50 Walter Hopkins 25 Perry Street. 'Phone 145. FULL STOCK OF FORD PARTS THE LITTLE GRAVE. “It.’H only a little prrnvo,” they said, “Only a child that's dead;” And ho they carelenfdy turned nwiy From the mound the spade made that day. Ah! they did not know how deop a shade That little arave in our home had made. I know that the coffin wbh narrow and nmall; One yard would have served for an ample pall; And one man in his arms could have borne away The rosewood and itn freight of clay;— But I know that darling hopes were hid Beneath that little coffin lid. T know that a mother Htood that day With folded hands by that form of clay; I know that burning teara were hid “ ’Neath the droopinur lash and aching lid.” And I know her lip and cheek and brow Were almost as white as her baby’s now. I know that some things were hid awny. The crimson frock, and wrappings Kay; The little sock and the half-worn shoe. The eap with its plumes and tassels blue; An empty crib, with itH covers spread, As white as the face of the sinless dead. ’Tin a little grave; hut oh. have care! For world-wide hopes are buried there; And ye, perhaps, in cominK years. May see, like her. throuKh blinding tears. How much of liKht. how much of joy. Is buried with an only boy. feeling of faith. They fight because of the call of their counlry. They feel justified in the sacrifice of human life. The destruction of property is neces sary. It is the brutal demand of war. But faith will not be destroyed. It is of man’s nature as essential an clement as the combative impulse. War is cruel, but wars are at times necessary. It does not mean that be cause men go to the front to kill that they are lacking in the Christian spirit. They follow the dictates of their con science and do their duty. Christianity is stronger to-day than it ever was. The church bows its head in deepest sorrow that the conflict cannot be stopped. The church is powerless to help. It can only comfort those who have lost dear ones at the front. It can cheer those who are doing the fighting, but cannot end the struggle. What ol Our Christianity? Memphia Appeal. Because of the cruelty of war some people wonder if Christianity has fail ed in Europe. Revolting details, from time to time, are reported which cause the average reader to ask if men have ceased to be men and have been trans formed into beasts. The lesson of the Master seems to have been forgotten. Soldiers have ignored the quality of mercy in their lust for blood. Prayers for peace seem to have no influence in Europe. In the presence of the revolting reali ties of war men’s thoughts turn from idealistic theory to the concrete facts. Christianity should call a halt. Christ can have no blessing for Mara. The chuch has been forgotten. The brotherhood of man no longer ex ists. Instead of sending up prayers for peace the nations of Europe are pray ing for victory, and so the strugle con tinues. In the end, after the fires of passion hum low, Christianity will bring peace, and then Europe will gaze on the ruins left in the wake of war and regret the fury of the fight. Christianity may be dumb to day, ! but it can never die. In the hearts of the men at the froat there is Hill a Pensively Patrick gazed into the pigsty, and fixed his eye and knitted his brow on the little object that snugly snorted to itself. “H’m,” he muttered as, shifting into a different position, he viewed the piglet from another angle. Along came Betty O’Hoyle, but not oven her pretty face could lure Patrick from his cogitations. ’’An’ how’s the pig, Pat?” she asked, slightly piqued by his indiffer ence. “He’s a livin’ wonder,” came the emphatic answer. “Shure, and how’s that, Patrick?” inquired Betty, drawing nearer the sty. “Be jabbers," exclaimed the con templative one, “he’s juBt guzzled two pailfuls of milk, and then I put him in the pail and he didn’t half fill it.” Despondency Due to Indigestion. “About three months ago when I was suffering from indigestion, which caused headache and dizzy Rpells and made me feel tired and despondent, I began tak ing Chamberlain's Tablets,” writes Mrs. Geo, Hon, Macedon, N. Y. “This med icine proved to be the very thing I needed, as one day’s treatment reli ved me greatly. I used two bottles of Cham beriairi'i Tablets and they rid me of the trouble.” Obtainable everywhere. Canada’s population only just ex ceeds that ef Greater Londea. Seen in a Cemetery. The niKht Wuy. Take a walk through the cemetery alone and you will pass the resting- place of a man who looked into the muzzle of a gun to see if it was loaded. A little further down the slope is a crank who tried to show how close he could stand to a moving train while it passed. In strolling about you will see the monument of the hired girl who tried to start the fire with kerosene, and a grass-covered knoll that covers the hoy who tickled the mule's tail. That tall shaft over a man who blew out the gas casts a shadow over tho hoy who tried to get on a moving truin. Side by side the pretty creature who always had her corset laced on the last hole, and the intelligent idiot who rode a bicycle nine miles in tun minutes, sleep unmolested. In silent repose is a doctor who took a dose of his own medicine. There, with a big marble monument over his head, is a rich old man who married a young wife. Away over there reposes a hoy who went fishing on Sunday, and the woman who kept strychnine powdera in the cup board. The man who stood in front of the mowing machine to oil the knives is quiet now and rests beside the careless brakeman who fed himself to the 70- ton engine, and near by may be seen the grave of the man who tried to lick the editor. Unfortunately, men want their sweethearts to be brilliant and showy, and their wives to be domestic and practical. The girl who understands how to sew, cook and nurae a sick child, docs not attract single men, and the superficial belle does not attract her husband after marriage. Hence the prevalence of divorce. Either men must become more sensible before marriage, more resigned afterward, or mothers must begin to teach their daughters in the cradles the necessity of combining the useful with the orna mental, the practical with the enter taining qualities. Cores 010 Sores, Other Remedies Won’t Con Tbe worn* 8ars, uo matter of how long standing, arv cured hjr the wonderful, old reliable Dr. Porter*e Autiacplk Healing OIL it relieves turn uni Mwah, id the same time. £c, 10c, $L0O. Shannon’s Experience. Editor Shannon of the Commerce News, one of the older heads attending the Press Convention at EaBtman, and who made the trip to Brunswick and St. Simon’s, relates to his readers what he saw at his first dance while on the island. He Bays: “This was oir first opportunity to get a peep at the modern dance. We saw what they call the tango, the lame duck, tho bunny hug, and all the rest— a combination of all that ib modern in dancing. It was, to us, a real sight. When the music began partners for the dance npproached each other, each with one arm around the other, while the lady gently reclined her head on the bosom of her partner; then business be gan to pick up. They skip back and forth, in interchangeable positions— lirat the lady with her foot and limb be tween his feet and limbs, and vice versa. Then they swing round and round, and the gentl man sees to it that his lady partner docs not fall. To insure this, he pulls off the stunt of ‘hug-me- tight' to perfection. Then they skip some more, and then hug some more. This they call dancing. We call it pure, unadulterated hugging. There’s hell in it, and we are Bute the devil is not mad in the least because some peo ple do that sort of thing. It may be all right for the other man’s wife or daughter.” The Clerk Guaranteed It. "A customer came into my store the other day and said to one of my clerks, 'Have you anything that will cure diar rhoea?' and my clerk went and got him a bottle of Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy, and Haid to him. 'if this does not cure you, I will not charge you a cent for it.’ So he took it home and came back in a day or two and said he was cured,” write J. H. Berry & Co., Salt Creek, Va. Obtain able everywhere. “I Don’t Feel Good” That is what a lot of people tell us. Usually their boweis only need cleansing. jtexaftg, Qid&i&ie/i, will do the trick and make you feel line. We know this [xmitively. Take ona tonight. Sold only by us, 10 cents. John R. Catea Drug Co,