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NEWNAN HERALD
NEWNAN, FRIDAY, SEPT. 3.
ONE DOLLAR A YEAR
IN ADVANCR.
THE VACATIONIST RETURNS.
In Trim Tailored Suit or Princess
Frock She Livens Fifth Avenue
Once More.
New York, Sept. 1. The first crisp
days of September find our avenue tak
ing on a new spriuhtlmeHH, not that it is
ever particularly dull or deserted, but
there is a different spirit. Summer vis
itors have Rone their various waya, and
New Yorkers have returned, ready to
take up city life again, with its endless
activities. The shops are showing the
fall and winter fashions; the dressmak
ing establishments have lost their lazy
calm, and delivery wagons nre loading
up and starting off ori trips from s mp
to home with creations of furrier, tail
or, modiste and shoemaker.
THE DIGNITY OK TAII.OIUOII GARMENTS.
Soft, fliifTy things do very well for
warm days; one relaxes and is cool,
happy, and delightfully feminine. But
with the first days of fall the tailored
dress or suit is donned with a feeling
that is almost akin to relief; American
SMART SUIT LINES
and are far more youthful and becom
ing to most than the old-time high col
lar. Many women prefer the high col
lar for street wear, with tailored suit
and hat, and even if it does not become
universal, it will share favor with the
low, open collar during the winter sea
son.
THE NEW COLORED BLOUSE.
One of the innovations of the season
is the colored blouse or separate waist
with the tailored suit. Tbis fad is prob
ably the outcome of the little chem
isettes of pink and blue that we have
been wearing with the taffeta frcek
and serge dress. 1 saw a particularly
attractive combination at one of the
A PANEL PRINCESS.
women, especially, find the tailored suit
or dress becoming and satisfying.
There is a trimness of line and a feel
ing of being well dressed that lends her
an added dignity.
PRINCESS FROCK HIGH IN FAVOR.
Strong rivals to the coat and skirt
are the princess frocks of serge, gabar
dine or whipcord; serge leads. While
trim and straight, these do not follow
exactly the lines of the princess of some
seasons hack; they aro usually belted,
sometimes panelled and yoked. Bells
plsy an important part this season.
Few costumes but show them; on the
princess they are often merely half
telts- that is, they extend from sido
front to side back, separated by a panel
at front and back. This flat, smooth
appearance in front and back is one of
the new notions this season; all pleats
and gathers are confined over the hips.
Many of the tailored coat Hiiits have
belts of patent or shiny motor leather.
These are often ornamented harmo
niously with applique designs of colored
suede; the soft, dull harmony of the
suede makes an effective contrast and
lends a distinctive touch to the suit.
One sees, also, belts of the same mate
rial as suit or dress, piped sometimes
with suede, patent leather, or a vivid
color; the effect is smart and attrac
tive. Buttons, too, lend their aid in
bringing in the bright touch of contrast
that 18 required this season in our smart
dHrk costumes.
There are some wonderfully attrac
tive buttons of galalilh, mother of
pearl rimmed with color, bright green,
blue or rose. Hnd numberless other
novelties in form and coloring. On an
imported suit of tweed displayed re
cently in one of our smart shops 1
noticed some extremely smart buttons
of woven leather, with loops of leather
for the shanks; tiny blended beauti
fully with the dark brown mixture of
the tweed and were really the chief at
traction of the suit. These, however,
are decided novelties and probably can
not be purchased separately as yet.
Calored buttons are used sparingly; one
or two at the closing of coat or blouse,
or one or two on the girdle are sutli
cient.
A WORD OR TWO ON COLI.ARS.
The open throat for general wear is
still a favorite and will probably hold
its own until well into the winter. High
collars, however, are being advocated
by many of the leading dressmakers;
not the perfectly straight choker or
stock of a fiw ^rears hack, necessarily,
although these are smart nnd becoming
lo many, hut a collar closed at the top
and open to below the curve of the
thioat. These are called "A’’ collara
tea rooms tho other afternoon; it was a
blouse of palo roae colored crepe de
chine, a shade between coral and old
rose, and waa worn with a d irk blue
serge suit. This blouse was made with
tucks at the shoulders to give fulness
over the bust arid was trimmed down
the front with a graduated frill of the
crepe; the blouse closed with round
nickel buttons. Around the high choker
collar was twisted a piece of black natin
ribbon, above which, reaching almost
to the chin, showed the points of a stiff
white under collar. Another suit of
beige colored serge had n blouse of
creamy yellow crepe embroidered with
old rose silk.. This fad of the contrast
ing blouse is practical and becoming,
and should appeal to many.
Many Complaints Heard.
This summer seer.-s to bavp produced
an nusual amount of sickness. Many
complain of headaches, lame backs,
rheumatism, biliousness and of being
“always tired," Aches, pains and ills
caused by the kidneys failing to do their
work nnd throw the poisonous WHste
from (he system yield quickly to Fo
ley's Kidney Pills. They help elimina
tion, give sound sleep and make you
feel well and strong. They are tonic in
action. J. F. Lee Drug Co.
A Father Who Had to Take His Hat
Off to His Son.
In tho September American Maga
zine appears a remarkable nrtiele en
titled, "Youth Leads tho Way,” which
gives an account of the tremendous re
cent advances in agriculture, directly
attributable to tho work of boys and
girls who are members of corn c.uba,
nnd other agricultural clubs throughout
the United States. In the artiele ap
pears a brief story of Jerry Moore, of
South Carolina, who, at the age of 15,
became the world's champion corn-
grower. How Jerry’s achievement
affected another boy is told in the fol
lowing extract from the artiele:
"Dr. Bradford Knapp, who succeeded
hi* late father as head of th • Farm
Demonstration Service, tells another of
a reluctant parent:
"A freckle-faced South Carolinian of
the Young Generation type teased for
an acre, to emulate Jerry Moore; but
the father thought t.h-<re was some
trick hack of Jerry'a achievement. He
at Inst consented to allow the boy to
grub an acre near a forest, pull the
stumps remove the atones, and work
it. Wnen the crop was harvested the
boy’s acre measured 80 bushels, and the
old man's, adjoining, measured only 8
“Ever since then," says Dr. Knapp,
“the old man has heen going to far
mers' institutes wilh that boy, sitting
on the front scat nnd saying: ‘Look
what me and John went and done ’
But he is gro wing more corn—a boy
showing him how.”
Some girls are disappointed in lave
and some in matrimony.
Newspaper Man Recommends It.
R R Wentworth, of the St. James
(Mo ) News, writes: "Two months ago
1 took a severe cold which settled on
my lungs, and 1 bad such pains in my
lungs 1 feared pneumonia. 1 got a Kit
tle of Folev's Honey and Tar and it
straightem d me up immediately. 1 can
recommend it to in- a genuine c -Ugh
and lung medicine " Many molhca
write (hat this reliable ni-ilicine cured
their children of croup. Hay fever »nd
astnma snff-rers sav it gives quick re
lief. J. F. Lee Drag Co.
He’s Back Home.
The editor of the Dayton (Ohio)
Daily News has been away on his va
cation and is back home again. Anent
his return he expresses himself as fol
lows:
"Another good thing about a vaca
tion is that it feels good to get back.
Every man who has ever taken a vaca
tion has lied about it to some extent
when he returned. Al least, nobody
has had quite as good a time as he has
claimed to have; it would have been im
possible to have done so; but that’s a
legitimate part of the vacation—to
boast about the good time you had
when away.
"But there is one feature of getting
back home that is a little disappointing.
You imagine while you are away that
everybody in the city must be missing
you awfully. You expect everybody in
Ihe place to know that you are faraway,
and you wonder how folks are getting
along without you. Then you come
home and butt into somebody and swell
up a little and begin talking about what j
a wonderful time you had, and he asks
you if you have been away. And then
you begin to realize that you are not so j
important a part of civilization as jou
had imagined, or else you believed
the party who asks you if you have
been away is the most stupid ass on
earth. The idea of somebody not know
ing that you were out of town; the idea
of a human being not feeling your ah- :
Bence, nor caring anythin ; about it one j
way or the other—isn’t that the most i
depressing thing in life?
"But to get back home—back where
the folks know you —back whe'e the 1
streets look like old friends, and the!
buildingB nod as you pass; back home,
where there is real comfort — where !
there is really something to eat, and
comfortahle beds to sleep in, and chairs
that rest one while sitting in them— j
and an absence of the superficial nnd
the artificial and the ‘bunk’— back j
home is the place, after all.
"Back home, where you know the j
people nnd the people know you; where !
you cannot fool anybody and where no- j
body can fool you —that’s the place.
Back where you do not suspect every
hian you meet of being a foreign noble-
man in disguise or n green goods man—
back where you do not suspect every
woman y ou meet of being an adven
turess or a foreign spy—back where
you have Ihe number of everybody nnd
where everybody has your number—
there is, verily, no place like home,
whether it is winter or summer, spring
or fall,"
None Equal to Chamberlain's.
“1 have tried most hII of the cough
cures and find that there is none equal to
Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy. It has
never failed to give me prompt relief,”
writes W. V. Hamer, Montpelier, Ind.
When you have a cold give this remedy
a trial and see for yourself what a
splendid medicine it is. Obtainable
everywhere.
About Being “Dunned.”
Rockford (III.) Record.
Some folks seem to entertain an odd
idea about receiving statements from
other people whom they owe—in more
common language, “being dunned.”
It is possible that people of this sensi
tive nature do not know that the busi
ness men or others who send them
statements of account always receive
such statements from the houses with
which they do business. If the account
i* paid within a specified time, a cash
discount is usually allowed. If the ac
count is not paid by the first of the
month following, a second dun is sent,
while if it is not paid by the fifteenth,
the account is sent to the local bank for
collection in the shape of a sight draft.
Tho folks who manufacture the stuff
that the merchants buy have to have
pay for the goods they sell, and it fol
lows pretty naturally that the merchant
who sells the same goodB to the local
consumer has to have pay for the
things he sella if he is to stay in busi
ness. Atiuththata good many peo
ple ought to take to heart somewhat
seriously is that the breach of etiquette
in this dunning business, if there is one,
is noi made by the person who Bends
the dun, but by the persoii who has al
lowed an account to run so long thac a
dun is necessary.
A NEWNAN^[NTERVIEW.
There is no true woman but will re
pay her husband over and over again
for kind, thoughtful treatment. He is
ready to call her childish, and she may
seem bo to him, but one thing is sure—
a woman never forgets. All little deeds
of love or thoughtfulness shown by his
hand yield a certain and abundant har
vest. She may love her home better
than any other spot on earth, yet she
sometimes gets so weary of the daily
routine of never-ending duties that fall
to her lot that she cannot help an
occasional feeling of envy for those who
have more time for recreation, for
going abroad, for all the little things
dear to the heart of every woman, but
from which the stern hand of duty de
bars her from enjoying. Still, for the
whole world she would not exchange
places, even if she could, with any wo
man, leaving home and John—dear old
John—as the price of her freedom from
care. If your wife has been a faithful
and true wife to you, tell her so.
UGH! CALOMEL MAKES YOU SICK.
DON'T STAY BILK CONSTIPATED
“Dodson's Liver Tone” Will Clean Your
Sluggish Liver Better Than Calomel
and Can Not Salivate.
Calomel makes you sick: vnu lose a
day’s work. Calomel is quicksilver uml
it salivates: calomel injures your liver.
If you nre bilious: feel lazy, sluggish
nnd all knocked out, if your IkiwpIs are
constipated anil your head aches or
stomach is sour, iust take a spoonful of
harmless Dodson’s Liver 'lone instead
of using sickening, salivating calomel.
Dodson’s Liver Tone is real liver medi
cine. You’ll know it next morning be
cause you will wake up feeling fine,
your liver will be working, your head
ache and dizziness gone, your stomach
will tse sweet ami bowels nirular. You
sill feel like working. You’ll be cheer
ful; full of energy, vigor uud ambition.
Your druggist or dealer sells you a
50 cent bottle of Dodson’s Liver* lone
under my personal guarantee the: lt
will clean your sluggish liver better :| lan
nasty calomel; it won’t make you .;*.).
and you can eat anything you Wu ,,l
without being salivated. Your d r n.
guarantees that each spoonful will ,.~ art
your liver, clean your bowels |
straighten you up by morning or v„ u
get your money back. Children gl:i,]i v
take Dodson's Liver Tone because it
pleasant tasting nnd doesn’t grw,
cramp or make them sick.
T nm selling millions of hotth * ,
Dodson’s Liver Tone to people who h ;lV) .
found that this pleasant, vegetable, 11v.• -
medicine takes the place of dam-
calomel. Buy one buttle on my .,,,.,;
reliable guarantee. Ask your ’dnim-t
about me,
Mr. Jennings Tells His Experience.
The following brief account of an in
terview with a Newnan man over four
years ago, and its sequel, will be read
with keen interest by every citizen:
H. W. Jennings, machinist, 78 Mur
ray street, Newnan, says: "Forseveral
years 1 had been subject to attacks of
kidney complaint. They came on me
after any exposure or wh n I got cold.
At such times my kidneys were irregu
lar in action and my back pained and
ached and made it hard for me to do
anv work. Since learning of Doan’s
Kidney Pills, 1 never suffer an attack
but what they relieve every symptom
of the complaint.” (Statement given
Fell. 20. 1911.)
Over four years later Mr. Jennirgs
said- ”1 have had no occasion to use
Doan’s Kidney Pills for some time.
They cured me of h very severe case of
kidney complaint. ”
Price 50c., at all dealers. Don’t
simplv ask for a kidney remedy —get
Doan’s Kidney Pills- the same that
Mr. Jennings had. Foster-Milburn Co.,
Props . Buffalo. N. Y.
Our Advice Is:
When you feel out of sorts from consti
pation, let us say that if
jfoxo&&
do not relieve you, Bee a physician,
because no other borne remedy will
Sold only by us, 10 cents.
.'•h* ft. Cat** Dru* C*.
Why Motor Trucks?
WHY
REO?
The motor truck business was necessarily of slow growth. Not that the superiority of the
motor vehicle—-when once perfected—was unrecognized. On the contrary, every automobile
maker realized from the first that this would eventually become the most important branch of
the motor industry. Blit the problems were so many and the conditions to be met so exacting,
the more prominent makers hesitated to engage in it—and none did until reasonably sure they
had the right thing.
As in every oilier line of business, the inexperienced rushed in where the better informed
hesitated. Concerns with money to lose and reputations to he jeopardized were chary about
offering for sale trucks of which they could not yet be sure.
On the other hand, the demand was ail irresistible temptation to the more adventurous, the
inventive and the inexperienced; and so it happened that within a short time there were more
than three hundred so-called truck manufacturers (90 per cent, of them merely assemblers of
parts procured hither and yon) in the field.
Tin 1 mortality has been great—and will be greater. The cost to users of buying such trucks
backed by such guarantees (?) cannot be computed.
Reo being one of the most prominent and successful makers of automobiles, was one o!
those to watch, to experiment, but to hold aloof. We could not afford to compete with such a*
product or with such methods as those with little money, and no reputation at stake, were
practicing.
On the other hand we felt that we were peculiarly well equipped to make trucks—in fact,
to take the lead in that branch of the industry, and the product had been developed to the point
where it was a dependable machine.
Reo factory facilities; Reo engineering experience; and especially the big broadspread Reo
sales and service organization, gave us advantages over all others.
Reo factory facilities enable us to manufacture a better car for less. This is a prime re
quisite, for, being a strictly business proposition, there is no room for extravagant margins in
the price of trucks.
So the Reo manufacturing facilities gave us an important advantage over newer concerns
in that important regard — low cost, and consequent low price.
Reo engineering is at the same time the best guarantee of stability, and the best advertis
ing for Reo trucks.
If you were asked what quality you have always considered first in Reo automobiles you
would say—dependability. Reo cars have always been reliable cars. Beginning away back in
the dark ages of the industry Reo cars covered themselves with glory in reliability runs. The
transcontinental record is still held by a Reo—never has any car made a greater record than
that of the great old two-cylinder Reo. To say Reo is to say reliability.
REO MOTORTRUCK CO., Lansing, Mich.
New si am A if to Co.,
DISTRIBUTORS
FOR sale;
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CITY PROPERTY. FARM LANDS.
Below Are Some of Best Real Estate Values
We Have to Offer:
10-acre tract on LaGrange Street.
20-acre tract on LaGrange Street.
25-acre tract on LaGrange Street.
25-acre tract, 4 mile from Newnan, on Roscoe road.
50-acre tract, I mile from Newnan, on Roscoe road.
100-acre tract, 10 miles from Newnan.
450-acre tract, 9 miles from Newnan, on good road.
GOOD CITY HOMES
House and lot with all conveniences on LaGrange Street.
House and lot with all conveniences on Buchanan Street.
House and lot on Sal bide Avenue.
House and lot on Jackson Street.
All above houses are practically new.
Vacant property for sale in any section of Newnan.
G. E. Parks Insurance and Realty Co.
11 1-2 GREENVILLE ST. ’PHONE 325. NEWNAN, GA.
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