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NEWNAN HERALD
NKWNAN, FRIDAY, NOV.
T H F. I* A O A N .
I do mil m»» «l th<* nintfir nolo
Atop th«' wild mlnil n thrift
Thr« hpr*ndthrift fiurtili*. 'Hm. rwnut*.
Thai h«n<> unon the* hill
Tin* bir»l trill nf n iwnir half *unif,
HIrH in the hi-ec h tree lur*
To feel my heart in pun-imr younfr.
And know the world Ih fnir.
Hrn earth ■ irlwlder rnlor Vimri
The a/.ure <*f her ny«
A merrier lilt of mu*lr than
The note of her hi"t liter htiyw'
fan Sprlnir an <*lor brlnp.
A* muttky hm her hair
Then it in not ho atm im* m thint?
That I ahould worship there.
(Jane MrI.ean.
Chose the Laws of God.
liirminithnm Ain-Herald,
Seldom in a man sentenced to death
in the courts of the United States with
out a trial by jury or the usual pro
cedure of indictment; hut such a case,
probably the first, rarne to light in a
Baltimore city court several days ago.
A woman bent with the weight of
years, and with her age further pro
claimed tiy tiie lines etched deep into
her countenance, stood before the judge
making her plea for mercy. She had a
son, a worthless son, who, coming home
in the early hours of the morning in a
drunken condition, was wont to beat and
curse her.
Under questioning the fnithful mother
was reluctuntly forced to admit that
the son on the previous morning hud
dragged her from the bed, cursed her.
and beaten her into unconsciousness.
Her battered face told its own story.
She ended with u tearful plea for mercy
for the brute, who stood by with a
downcast head, unable to utter a word
m extenuation..
At the close of the mother’s story
the judge turned to the son and said:
“John Kenyes, you are charged with
rursing and beating your aged mother.
Do you want to be tried by the laws of
God or mun?”
Benyes was surprised. The laws of
(!nd were strange to him. He wiih fa
miliar with the procedure of nearly
every court but this one, and ho thought
he suw a chance. So he expressed pref
erence for the laws of God.
Judge Leviaon, who was sitting on
the case, called for the clerk’s bible and
opened it at the hook of l.eviticus. He
turned the pages until lie reached tho
twentieth chapter and ran his linger
down tho page to the ninth verse. Then
he read very solemnly:
“For everyone that eurseth his
father or mother shall lie surely put to
death; he that hut It cursed his father or
his mother, his blood ho upon him.”
“The laws of God condemn you to
death, ” solemnly declared the judge,
“but it is within my power to enforce
only the laws of man, and under these
laws I give you six months in the house
of correction."
State Warehouse Plans
Atlanta Copal it ution.
In a dignified statement Commis
sioner of Agriculture J. D, l’rice sets
forth his attitude regarding a State
warehouse system. Mr. Price says,
first Hnd foremost, that it should be
created and administered for the best
interests of tho farmers of the State,
and that the machinery of its adminis
tration should be a matlorof secondary
consideration. He promises the active
support and co-operation of his depart
ment in the attainment of the best re
sults, regardless of where that admin
istration is located.
This is the only view to take of it.
The primary object of the proposed
State warehouse system is to provide a
thoroughly safe and readily negotiable
form of cotton receipt which ahull be
at all times the equivalent in value of
the actual bale of cotton itself. It is
not of so much importance who directs
or administers the system, as that it
ahull be established upon a sound,
stable and uniform basis that will make
every receipt issued against a bale of
cotton the equivalent of actual cash.
This ia the chief feature of tho pro
posed legislation to which tho General
Assembly should direct its attention.
After that comes the question of ad
ministration.
Georgia needs legislation which will
provide a standard, safe and acceptable
form of cotton wanehouse receipt which
any bank will be glad to accept as col
lateral.
If the Legislature can give Georgia a
law which will provide such a receipt
it will have done an unquestioned ser
vice for the farmers and the business
interests of the State. But if it per
mits politics to creep into its consider
ation of this question and control its
action upon it, there is grave danger
of defeating the whole purpose for
which the measure is designed.
RENOWNED MAN VISITS ATLANTA
L T. Cooper, Noted Scientist and
Philanthropist, Gives Large Part
of Income Eacli Year to
Charity.
Not in recent years, perhaps, lisa t he
mming of uny public character aroused
such widespread interest as did the vis
it of L. T. Cooper, the millionaire phi
lanthropist, to Atlanta recently.
Mr. Cooper is described as one of
America’s foremost leaders of advanced
thought, and sprang into fame and for
tune through his new health theories,
based on what is known as the Tanlac
treatment. He is a man of rure talents,
magnetic force and charm of manner.
He never ceases to surprise you with
the infinite variety of his knowledge,
ami its absolute correctness and thor
oughness. In several of the larger cit
ies, especially throughout the South, he
has done a great deal of relief work
among the poor.
Mr. Cooper is a firm believer in prac
tical philanthropy, and his relief work
in Atlanta is already familiar to the
charity workers of that city. During
his recent visit there he distributed at
the Piedmont Hotel, under the personal
direction of leading charity workers,
eleven hundred ready-made dresses, of
excellent quality, to the poor women
and children. Ladies prominent in At
lanta social life and many prominent
citizens were on hand early in the af
ternoon to assist in co-operating with
Mr. Cooper in this worthy cause.’
A few weeks previous to this he per
formed a similar service in Binning- >the nourishment they contain. So of
High Price for Cotton Seed.
N«*w Orl».*an* Tinxt*-Pica yum*.
Cotton-tfrowerB in Mississippi, Louif-
innu and throughout the South are re
joicing over the high price cotton seed
is bringing just now. which breaks all
records. This will mike up, to a slight
degree, for the losses to which grow
ers were subjected because of the re
duction in the size of the crop. It is
said thut the amount of seed to a bale
of lirit is well above the average; but
this does not bring the amount up to
what tho mills can use.
Tho present high price of cotton
seed an ! its cause are under discussion
in the press just now, but while it is
obvious that it is due primarily, as in all
such cases, to the fact that the demand
exceeds the production, othqr points
enter into the price. The Galveston
News is convinced that the high price
of cotton seed and peanuts is because
they can be converted into so many
different kinds of food which will not
spoil, and which is cheap.
"One authority claims,” The News
points out, “that it has been ascer
tained in recent years that the peanut
is the only product that can be con
verted into all the articles of a first-
class menu. Soup, meat, bread, olive
oil, milk, tea, butter, hash, and many
high-sounding French ..rticlos are all
made of the little Spanish peanut.
There are millions of soldiers to feed
in Europe, and millions of women and
children to save from starvation. Even
with seed at $40 a ton, cotton seed pro
ducts are very cheap food, considering
AN IMPORTANT LETTER
FROM A GEORGIA WOMAN
More than 4,000,000 women will be
entitled to vote for President of the
United Slates in 1910.
ham, and donated one thousand dresBes
to the poor of that city. Similar dona
tions were also made in Nashville,
Chattanooga and Knoxville. And his
establishment of the now famous “free
bread lino" in Louisville during the
past winter, where he distributed fifty
thousand loaves of bread absolutely
free and without question to those in
want, proved a revelation to charity
workers there. In fact, in practically
every city Mr. Cooper has visited he
has always shown his great sympathy
for the poor and unfortunate by per
forming some unique act of charity.
Mr. Cooper contends that nine-tenths
of the diseases and ill health of the
present-day American is due to faulty
digestion and improper assimilation of
the food, which finally produces a
stutled-up condition of the vital organs.
It has been said that Tanlac, his cel
ebrated medicine which is now accom
plishing such remarkable results
throughout tile country, not only quick
ly overcomes all catarrhal inflamma
tion of the mucous membrane, but acts
directly in the correction of stomach,
liver, kidney and intestinal disorders.
Tanlac, as has been so convincingly
proven by the thousands upon thousands’
who have indorsed it, is also a recon
structive tonic of great power, and has
been known to entirely relieve the most
obstinate cases of rheumatism and
blood disorders, in a very short time.
It is, indeed, doubtful if anything
ever placed on the market in the way
of a medicine has sprung into such
popular favor in so short a time. Peo
ple everywhere have been quick to
recognize its wonderful merit. Thede-
mand for it has been nothing short of
phenomenal.
In Atlanta, where Tanlac was placed
on sale only about a month ago, over
9,000 bottles have been sold, which, ac
cording to the Jacobs Pharmacy Co., of
that city, has established a new record
and is unprecedented in the history of
the drug business of Atlanta. In the
city of Knoxville the Kulilman-Cham-
hliss Co. sold and distributed 45,32(>
bottles since the 27th day of February,
1915. In Louisville, Ky.. the Taylor-
Isaacs Drug Co., who operate eight re
tail stores in that city, sold 32,000 bot
tles in less than 90 days. Through the
Nashville office nlone nearly 100,009
bottles have been sold in six months
time. The demand for Tanlac in Bir
mingham. Chattanooga and, in, fact,
everywhere it has been introduced, has
likewise been phenomenal, and the de
mand for it is constantly increasing. A
total of over one million bottles of the
medicine have been sold in nine months’
time, and it is, without a doubt, the
most widely talked of medicine in the
world to-day.
When asked to explain this record
breaking demand for Tanlac, Mr. G. F.
Willis, Mr. Cooper’s Southern repre
sentative, said: “There can beoniyone
possible explanation, and it can be told
in one word, ’merit.’ That tells the
whole story. No preparation, no matter
how extensively advertised, can possi
bly meet with such pnonomenal success,
unless it possessed t xtruordinary cura
tive powers."
Thousands upon thousands are testi
fying daily that they have been re
lieved of disease after years of suffer
ing by its use.
Tanlac is sold in Newnan exclusively
by Odom Drug Co.
peanuts. Considering the food value
of peanuts, they have always sold low.
These articles of food keep a long time
without spoiling. Tho life of many a
war victim will doubtless he saved by
this year’s cotton crops.”
Thus the South again figures before
Etrope as likely to be one of the pro
viders of food for the many millions of
people across the Atlantic otherwise
likely to suffer from the scarcity or
luck of enough to feed all.
Distress in the Stomach.
There are many people who have a
distress in the stomach after meals.
It is due to indigestion and easily reme
died by taking one of Chamberlain’s
Tablets after meals. Mrs. Henry Pad-
glian, Victor, N. Y., writes: “For
some time 1 was troubled with head
ache and distress in my stomach after
eating, also with constipation. About
six months ago I began taking Cham
berlain's Tablets. They regulated the
action of my bowels and the headache
and other annoyances ceased in a short
time.’’ Obtainable everywhere.
A man under the influence of juice
which had been fermented fell off a
street car, says the Philadelphia Record.
The car stopped and the conductor and
sympathetic passengers picked him up
and brushed some of tho mud and dust
off and set him on a seat. He became
dimly conscious that something had
haliened and that he was an object of
interest to his fellow - passengers.
Turning to the man next to him he
asked:
"C’lision?” He was assured that
there had been none.
" ’Splosion'.’’' he asked, and received
the same answer.
“Wha’ was it’.’’’ ho next asked thick
ly. His neighbor assured him that noth
ing important had occurred.
“ ’F I'd Known that,’’ said the vic
tim of the mishap, “1 wouldn’t got off.”
Which fable teaches us that some
times a man gets off when it would
have been wiser to stay on.
Too often preserving the honor of the
family is only a matter of keeping it
from being found out.
Augusta, Gn.—’’Dr. Pierce’s Favorite
Prescription without any doubt put me
on my feet when I was suffering from
irregularity. I hail constant pain in my
right side which itlterferred with my
activity, compelling me to keep quiet
at such times, My nerves were out of
tone as well as my general constitution,
and had been for an entire year. Very
little activity was exhausting, mid I did
not get enough rest at night, to recuper
ate, hut would awaken the next morning
quite lifeless. 1 read of Doctor Pierre's
medicines and immediately began to
take the * Prescription ’ with the happy
result of curing my nervous state, cor
recting my womanly trouble and giving
me health. I have advised others to
take it and those that have taken it are
equally ns well pleased.”—Mas. M. O.
IiKAZutY, 1018 D’Antignac Street.
There is nothing that will bring com
fort and renew hope to the invalid
so surely us good news. When the
vital forces are at a low ebb and every
thing seems useless, a ray of joy and
assurance will stimulate the weary
body to new effort and energy. A let
ter from a loved one lias turned the
tide in many a seige of sickness.
Doctor Pierce, of the Invalids’ Hotel,
Buffalo, N. Y., lias good news for every
suffering woman, write him to-day and
tell him your troubles, and he will setid
you just the right advice to restore you
to health mid bring back the roses to
your cheeks, and without charge.
His "Favorite Prescription” has been
the rescue of thousands of suffering
women. Many grateful patients have
taken Dr. Pierce's advice.
Mothers, if your daughters are weak,
lack ambition, are troubled with head
aches, lassitude and are pale and sickly,
Doctor Pierre’s Favorite Prescription is
just wliat they need to surely bring
the bloom of health to their cheeks
and make them strong and healthy.
Resolutions on the Death of Mrs.
Pauline Faver Camp.
Whereas, out beloved sister, Mrs.
Pauline Faver Camp, was taken from
us to the home eternal on Sept. 9, 1915;
and
Whereas, possessing a voice of unu
sual pathos and sweetness, a mind clear
and brilliant, an amiable and lovable
disposition, and a soul of the truest and
noblest type, hers was a character ad
mired and beloved by everyone. There
fore. he it resolved —
1. That *e, the members of the Wo
man’s Missionary Society of the First
Methodist church, mourn her absence,
and realize that her place among us
cannot be filled.
2. That she was a helpful, true and
loyal worker, ever ready and willing to
aid in the Master’s cause. Kind and
sympathetic, faithful to the church
and the trust reposed in her, she will
he greatly missed by her church, her
friends and her city, which she loved
and served.
3. That we extend our sympathy to
the bereaved family, and pray that
they may not mourn as those without
hope, for in the bye and bye we confi
dently trust that we, with them, shall
meet her again.
I saw a fair and lovely tlow’r
DifMR’llinpr sweetness by the way;
I caught it to my heart in love.
And cherished it throughout its day.
This was an emblem of thy life.
So clothed in purity and grace.
And in our hearts, to cheer and bless.
Thy mem’ry holds a lasting place.
Mrs. R. W. Freeman,
Mrs. D. W. Boone,
Mrs. B. T. Thompson,
Committee.
After suffering a long time with
toothache the young colored girl got up
courage enough to go to the den
tist. The moment he touched the tooth
she began to scream.
“Look here,” he said, “you mustn’t
yell like that. Don’t you know I’m a
'painless dentist?’ ”
“Well, mebbe yo’ is painless, sah,”
she said, “but I isn’t.”
Why Not Paint Your Home Now?
We can save you money on your hill of paint, and make you a price of
$1.55 |jer gallon. <>ur paint consists of lead, zinc, asbestos, and the best lin
seed oil. These properties make the highest grade paint. We guarantee
our paint not to |>eel or crack in five years. We will compare analysis with
any paint made This is what our customers think of our paint: We sell
on an average four bills of paint per week. This speaks very highly for
our paint.
It Will Soon Be Time to Sow Oats
Don't forget the Cole Oat Drill will get you a good stand of oats, and
save enough oats in a little while to pay for the machine. Some things you
can do without, but it will not pay to do without a Cole Oat Drill. We have
sold them all over the county. Ask your neighbor about them.
JOHNSON HARDWARE CO.
TELEPHONE 81, NEWNAN, GA.
H. G. ARNALL MERCHANDISE COMPANY
“The Store That Underbuys.’’
Our Jitney Offer This and 5c.
Don't Miss This. Cut out this slip,
enclose with 5c and mail it to Foley &
Co., Chicago, 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 Kid
ney Pills, for prin in sides and back,
rheumatism, backache, kidney and blad
der ailments, and Foley’s Cathartic
Tablets, a wholesome nnd thoroughly
cleansing cathartic, for constipation,
biliousness, headache and sluggish bow-
ela. J. F. Lee Drug Co.
urn
You Need a Tonic
There are times in every woman’s life when she
needs a tonic to help her over the hard places.
When that time comes to you, you know what tonic
to take—Cardui, the woman’s tonic. Cardui is com
posed of purely vegetable ingredients, which act
gently, yet surely, on the weakened womanly organs,
and helps build them back to strength and health.
It has benefited thousands and thousands of weak,
ailing women in its past half century of wonderful
success, and it will do the same for you.
You can’t make a mistake in taking
Cow feed is higher at present than you or we have
known since you have owned a milch cow. And for
this reason there seems to be a move all over the
country to dispose of all the cows. Therefore we
have decided to divide profits on cow feed for about
two weeks, naming the following ridiculously low
prices—
Cotton Seed Meal, per 100 lbs.,
$1.75
Dairy Feed, per 100 lbs.,
$1.75
Wheat Bran, per 75 lbs.,
$1.25
Pure Wheat Shorts, per 75 lbs.,
$1.40
We call your attention especially to" the prices on
Cotton Seed Meal and Dairy Feed.
Come quick and buy your supply before our stock
is exhausted. We cannot replace these goods at the
prices we sell them to you by the 100 pounds.
A conversation was overheard on one
of the city street ears. Two old peo
ple were holding hands. The wo
man smiled through her wrinkles and
said to her man: “To-morrow is the
twenty-fifth anniversary of our wed
ding. John. I think l will kill two of
the chickens that were hatched last
spring. ”
The man looked around with u se
rious expression on his face and said:
"All rignt. Mary, but why should you
make these poor chickens suffer for
what happened 25 years ago?"
The Woman’s Tonic
Miss Amelia Wilson, R. F. D. No. 4, Alma, Ark.,
says: “l think Cardui is the greatest medicine on earth,
for women. Before I began to take Cardui, I was
so weak and nervous, and had such awful dizzy
spells and a poor appetite. Now I feel as well and
as strong as 1 ever did, and can eat most anything.”
Begin taking Cardui today. Sold by all dealers.
Has Helped Thousands.
CENTRAL OP GEORGIA RAILWAY CO.
CURRENT SCHEDULES.
ttrtftln
ChatlHUoocA
CVdartown. .
Coluiubu* .. .
ARRIVE KKOM
. .10..17 A. M.
. 1 :V. p. M.
, . 6 ;4J A. K.
. 9 |0 A m.
DEPART FOR
7:17 r. M. iiriftiu 6:45 A. M. 1:40 p. m.
ChattuiHvctt ll:0i a. m.
Odartown 7:2U p. m.
6:36 P. M. Columbus. ".*>5 a. m. B:I5 p.s
FORD TOURING CAR
$440.00 F. O. B. DETROIT
Walter Hopkins
25 Perry Street. 'Phone 145.
FULL STOCK OF FORD PARTS
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