Newspaper Page Text
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NEWNAN HERALD
EWNAN. KRIliAY, NOV. 12.
1.1 V K.
\ crust of hrcait nncl »• «»rm*r 1" nkw?p In.
\ mtnuir !•» umlli- nttfl «n hour to wim ji in.
\ pint of joy t•» ri |n*rlc of tn»»ihl< .
\tul never n tftuirh. hut the nviinn pom* wuulc,
A mI < nut im life.
\ rru**t Hnd * corner that love rnsken prociotiH,
*Vith fin* nrnileb t<» wurtn Mi»d the tf»r» to re-
fresh us.
\nd joy sweeter when cirtH come tutor.
And a m'»nn ie the tlneet of foils for Ihukliter;
And that In life. -1 Paul H. IhmbAr.
Where Education Fails.
♦♦••view of Re views.
All over tho country, nt ever-increas
ing cost, wo nro constructing splendid
buildings for the service of primary
imd higher instruction of children and
young men and women. We are train
ing teacherB from a scholastic stand-
point, and are trying to make the
-chools Borve in a better way the indi
vidual preparation for industry, com
merce, and agriculture. Jlut we are
almost wholly failing to utilize our
educational system for the Hpecific
training of citizens in their vurious du
ties as such. The consequence is that
the Btandards aril methods of our polit
ical and organized life ore lower than
those of our private life. There is per
fect consistency between die idenlH of
those who glorify peace, and the aims
<if those who would train every Amer
ican hoy to be ready to rnninlain pence
in any time of emergency or danger.
We are not getting anything like the
aocia! and public values that we ought
to be reapi g from our investment
<n schools and education. Scholar
ship is not poplar in our universities
and colleges. Athletic life furnishes
no proper outlet, because it is vicarious
and quasi professional. A few young
gladiators monopolize the athletic ac
tivity of our institutions, nnd the vast
majority are taught to look on and yell
for the maintenance of college or school
•spirit.
Thus our groat institutions, though
•more and more costly'in their appoint
ments und maintenance, are painfully
aware th t they are not producing the
results that, might to he manifest. Many
of their students a possible majority-—
cunnot write a well-phrased or cor
rectly spelled letter. They do not know
the bible, or Shakespere, or CharlcR
Dickens. They are not capable of
reading the editorial page of u good
newspaper. This criticism does not ap
ply to all, hut to what, in at least a
good many large institutions, must in
elude fully half of the undergratues.
It would to unjust to locate blame in
any specific quarter. The faults lie
deep in our current life, and are wide
spread, There are great resources of
worth nnd power latent in those very
youths who do not find themselves ab
sorbed in tho study of text-hooks, or
held to discipline with the sternness of
the football coach. Hut there is a gos
pel of soci il and public duty, accom
panied by certain practical applications,
that might be usetl to bring out the
earnestness nnd personal worth of
thousands of those young men. They
should he strongly impressed with the
grsvity of the issues of this momen
tous time in which wo live. Without
much, if any, additional burden to tho
taxpayers, every one of theso students
of high schools, normal schools, colleges
and universities could ho so taught nnd
trained uh to be well prepared to exer
cise many of the usual nnd some of the
umiaunl duties of citizenship. Such
training would benefit students in their
henlth und morals, would givo them a
finer sense of private as well as public
■duty, and would furnish them with
various kinds of practical experience
and knowledge that would redound to
the welfare of our political and govern
mental life.
A fumily on the North Side of Boa-
lon have several children, but only one
the eldest—is u boy. The little lad
grew used to sisters, and longed for a
brother. The hoy was 12 recently, and
the house was rather upset in anticipation
of something or other. The father was
busy, and the son had to sift the ashes
and take care of the furnace. At this
juncture a nurse appeared on the scone,
and 1 wo days later she came to the lit
tle hoy.
"What do you think you’ve got?”
she asked him.
"A baby brother,” fairly gasped the
youngster.
"No, dearie it’s a baby sister,” re
plied the nurse.
"Gosh!” groaned the youngster,
'must 1 always sift these ashes?”
Distress in the Stomach.
There are many people who hive 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-
ghan, Victor, N. Y., writes: "For
some time I was troubled with head
ache and distress in my stomach after
eating, also with con-dipation. About
six month* ago 1 began taking Cham
berlain's Tablets. They regulated the
ac'ion of my bowels and the headache
and other annoyances ceased in a short
time.” Obtainable everywhere.
There Is No Question
but that indigestion aud the distressed
feeling which always goes with it cun
be promptly relieved by taking a
Dyspepsia
Tablet
before and after each meal. 25oabo*.
John R. Cstei Drug Co.
COOPER WILL PROVE
FAMOUS THEORIES.
Celebrated Medicine Accomplishing
Remarkable Results in Lead
ing Cities.
Referring to the recent visit to At
lanta of L. T. Cooper, the man who
electrified the larger cities of the coun
try with his philanthropy, henlth
theories and celebrated medicine, Tan-
lac, G. F. Willis, his Southern repre
sentative, said:
“Thousands of the most prominent
people in Atlanta, Birmingham, Nash
ville, Chattanooga, Louisville, Knox
ville, and other cities where his cele
brated medicine has been accomplish
ing such remarkable results, are even
more enthusiastic over Tanlac than Mr.
Cooper himself.
“As previously stated, Mr. Cooper
contends that nine-tenths of the dis
eases nnd ill-health of the averng per
son is due to a catarrhal condition,
which produces faulty digestion and
improper assimilation of tho food.
"In a recent interview Mr. Cooper
was asked if Tanlac would relieve kid
ney trouble, liver complaint, rheuma
tism, and a dozen other ailments, and
in this connection said:
” ‘As I have repeatedly said, my
medicine acts directly on the mucous
membrane, stomach and blood, expelling
from them the impurities and toxic pois
ons, and rendering to them a strong,
healthy condition. I arn convinced that
the stomach regulates the condition of
the blood, and is the fountain head of
the health or disease, as the case may
be. My medicine is intended primarily
for the regulation of the stomach and
catarrhal inflammation, but it is no un
common thing for persons who have
used it to eomn to me and explain that
it has relieved them of rheumatism
and many other ailments not generally
recognized as having their origin in
stomach trouble.’
“The ingredients or medical ele
ments which make Tanlac come from
muny remote sections of the earth—tho
Alps, the Pyrenees, Russian Asia,
West Indies, mountain States near the
Rocky Mountains, Mexico and Peru, are
among the points from which the prin
cipal parts of the preparation are ob
tained. In the principal laboratory of
the Cooper Medicine Co., Inc., under
the efficient direction of Herr Jos Von
Trimbach, a native German chemist of
note, these medicine herbs, roots and
harks are assembled in the rough and
painstakingly developed so as to attain
hat high standard of efficiency shown
by the uniform preparation of Tanlac.”
In referring to the unprecedented de
mand for Tanlac in Atlanta, Mr. Chas.
A. Smith, manager of the Jacobs Phar
macy Co., said: ,
"1 have been in the drug business in
Atlanta 25 years, and not in my expe
rience have we handled anything that
even approaches Tanlac as a seller. In
less than five weeks’ time we have sold
and distributed through our eleven
Htores over 9,000 bottles, and on last
Saturday alone over 400 people called
at our stores to obtain the medicine.
Judging from the repeat sales and the
many expressions of satisfaction from
those who have actually tested Tanlac,
the preparation must he something of
extraordinary merit.”
Tanlac ia Bold exclusively in Newnan
by Odom Drug Co.
Buying Merchandise For Cash. TO CHANGE YOUR SKIN !
Wanted Dynamite in a Safe Place
lntllRnapoliN Nowh.
In aorne of the small town drug stores
in the quarry districts of Indiana you
can buy anything, from talcum powder
to dynamite. Not long ago a small
quarry oporator drove up to one of
theso stores. The man was in a bug
gy, and his wife was with him. Call
ing to tho proprietor of the store, he
said, “Jim, bring out that box I bought
awhile ago.”
The package was put in the buggy
at the feet of the man and his wife.
The hitter eyed the box suspiciously.
“What's in that package?” she asked
with some asperity.
"Now, never mind," said the hus
band, "that's not going to hurt you.”
The evasion excited the wife’s fur
ther suspicions. “Ed Spivens,” she ex
claimed, "that is a box of dynamite!”
"Weil, what if it is?” said Ed em
phatically. "It won't do any damage
unless it explodes.”
“Ed Spivens,” shrilled the woman,
“if you think I’m going to ride six
miles in a buggy with fifty pounds of
dynamite at my feet you are a bigger
fool than 1 thought you wore! You
have the man take that stutV out and
put it in tin back purt of the buggy,
under the seat!”
How to Prevent Croup.
It may he a surprise to you to learn
that in muny cases croup cun he pre
vented. Mrs. H. M. Johns, Elida,
Ohio, relates her experience as follows:
"My lit'le boy is subject to croup.
During the past winter I kept a bottle
of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy in the
house, and when he began having that
croupy cough I would give him one or
two doses of it and it would break the
attack. I like it better for children
than any other cough medicine because
children take it willingly, und it is safe
and reliable.” Obtainable everywhere.
In nr* and Ituneh.
The idea that has pained so rapidly
among farmers as to the value of cash
buying and cash selling cannot fail to
improve economic, social and educa
tional conditions in rural life. When
our people learn to appreciate the im-
I pnrtance of a small income daily, week-
| ly or monthly, then will millions that
have heretofore been paid for credit
and expensive handling be saved.
Cash relieves farmers of much em
barrassment. It increases the profits.
It gives independence and thrift; pro
vides conveniences in the home: im
plements and machines for greater pro
ductions, at less expense and labor. It
is often the difference between profit
and loss.
Our greatest problem on the farm >s
how to secure more cash, and how to
use it when it is produced. Former
methods of growing cotton or any
other one crop have interfered with
the prosperity of the grower, and have
fostered abnormal and unstable busi
ness conditions. The debts of the cot
ton-growers are detrimental not only to
him, but to business and the general
prosperity of the country. They dis
turb business in a very critical time,
affecting markets, public enterprise
and permanent improvements. The
system, not the individual, is to blame;
but conditions cannot be improved ma
terially until growers change from a
credit to a cash basis.
This is being done. Less credit buy
ing haR been done this year thun for
many, if reports are true. This is one
reason why the South is in better con
dition, in spite of the war. than it was
last year. Although cotton has been
declared contraband of war und the
European markets have been circum
scribed, optimism prevails. There i3
money enough in the country to carry
the surplus cotton, facilities for build
ing warehouses, and a willingness
among banks and other business men to
do their part to maintain a stable mar
ket.
The South never again will be de
pendent upon the North and the East
for money and credit facilities if we
get upon a cash basis. This we can do,
and this we must do, even though it
causes hardship to those who are a
year behind.
Diversification that provides for food
and feed, with cash crops and animals
during the year when cash is needed,
is the remedy. Our recent gains have
been possible because of diversification.
Our Jitney Offer—This and 5c.
Don’t Miss This. Cut out this slip,
enclose with 5c. and mail it to Foley &
Co., Chicago, 111., writing your name
and address clearly. You will receive
in return a trial package containing
Foley’s Honey and far Compound, for
coughs, colds and croup; Foley’s Kid
ney Pills, for pain in sides and back,
rheumatism, backache, kidney and blad
der ailments; and Foley's Cathartic
Tablets, a wholesome and thoroughly
cleansing cathartic, for constipation,
biliousness, headache and sluggish bow
els. J. F. Lee Drug Co.
A bunch of girls were rallying around
an ice-cream table when one of the
party suddenly became possessed with a
happy thought.
"Oh, girls!” she exclaimed, “I just
heard the most perfectly lovely conun
drum! What is the difference between
an old maid and a married woman?”
“Give us the answer,” said another
of the fairies, while the rest pondered.
“Wo couldn’t guess it in a week of Wed
nesdays. ”
“An old maid,” was the smiling re
sponse of the first, “looks for a husband
every day, and a married woman looks
for one every night."
How to Develop the Highest
Degree of Vital, Nervous
and Muscular Vigor
Snakes throw off their outer skin
| once a yenr. Human beings change
! their skin perhaps nine times in a
year; that is. they have a new skill
| about once In six weeks.
The value of a clean skin in main
taining health is not projierly under
stood by the majority of people. Clean
liness is a part of health. You can
not lie healthy unless you are clean
not. only externally, hut also inter
nally.
The blood should also ho assisted
occasionally, like- the skin, in throw
ing off poisons so that the system may
not get clogged and leave a weak spot
for disease germs to enter the system.
When tho Hood is clogged wo suffer
from wlmt. Is commonly called a cold.
Dr. I’lerce's Golden Medical Discov
ery purifies the hlood und entirely
eradicates the poisons that breed and
feed disease. It thus cures scrofula,
oozomu, bolls, pimples and other erup
tions that mar and scar the skin. Pure
Mood Is essential to good health. The
weak, run-down, debilitated condition
which so muny people experience is
commonly the effect of Impure blood.
Doctor I’lerce's Golden Medical Dis
covery not only cleanses the hlood of
impurities, hut It increases, the activity
of the Wood-making glands, and it en
riches the body with an ahunduut sup
ply of pure, rich hlood.
Take it ns directed und It will search
out impure and poisonous matter in
the stomach, liver, bowels nnd kidneys
and drive it from the system through
the natural channels.
It will penetrate Into the joints and
muscles, and dissolve the iioisonous ac
cumulations. Had blood is driven out.
It will furnish you with rich, pure
blood full of vital force—the kind that
increases energy and ambition, that
rejuvenates the entire, body.
”1 have learned by a rather sad ex
perience,” said Col. Bolivar Beasley,
“that any man who acts on a sugges
tion of Josh Hopkins is a fool. A short
time ago he told me that when he im
bibed too freely he pretended to be sick
as soon as he got home, and always got
by with the trick. I tried it the other
night by commencing to groan heavily
the moment I opened the front door,
and between groans told my wife that
I was dreadfully ill, but she didn’t
seem to he worried. I dropped to sleep
groaning, and in a couple of hours %vas
awakened by a dream that somebody
was building a bonfire on my stomach,
and found that my wife had planted
there a mustard plaster as large as a
door mat. For the last two days I have
been feeling as raw around the waist
as a freshly shelled oyster, and you can
bet that I’m not going to try any more
tricks on Amanda.”—New Orleans
States.
Went to the Hospital.
C. E. Blanchard, postmaster at Blan
chard. Cal., writes: “I had kidney trou
ble so bad I had to go to the hospital.
Foley’s Kidney Pills were recommended
to me and they completely cured me. I
cannot speak too highly of them.”
Sufferers in every State have had sim
ilar benefit from this standard remedy
for kidney and bladder ailments. It
banishes backache, stiff joints, swollen
muscles and all the various symptoms
of weakened or diseased kidneys. J. F.
Lee Drug Co.
A negro truck driver backed his
wagon into the space allotted to a rival
transfer concern at a railway freight
depot.
“Hey, dar, niggah!” yelled the
driver on whose territory the other had
transgressed. “I’ll knock yo’ outa yo’
house an’ home ef you don’t back up.”
“I’se got no home,” retorted the of
fending driver. “Now, what yo’ gonna
do ’bout dat?”
“I’ll dig yo' one, niggah—I’ll dig yo’
one!”
Watch Your Children
Often children do not let parents know
they are constipated. They fear some
thing distasteful. They wiU like Itexall
Orderlies—a nuld laxative that tastes
like sugar. Sold only by us, 10 cents.
John R. Cates Drug Co.
HUSBAND RESCUED
DESPAIRING WIFE
After Four Years of Discouraging
Conditions, Mrs. Bullock Gave
Up in Despair. Husband
Came to Rescue.
Catron, Ky.—In an intereating letter
from this place, Mrs. Bettie Bullock
writes as follows: "1 suffered for four
years, with womanly troubles, and during
this time, 1 could only sit up for a little
while, and could not walk anywhere at
all. At times, I would have severe pains
in my left side.
The doctor was called in, and his treat
ment relieved me for a while, but 1 was
soon confined to my bed again. After
that, nothing seemed to do me any good.
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RAILWAY CO.
CURRENT SCHEDULES.
I SELL THE BEST CLASS TRADE THE
MAJESTIC RANGE
I had gotten so weak I could not stand,
and I gave up in despair.
At last, my husband got me a bottle of
Cardui, the woman’s tonic, and 1 com
menced taking it. From the very first
dose, I could tell it was helping me. 1
can now walk two miles without its
tiring me, and am doing all my work.”
If you are all run down from womanly
troubles, don’t give up in despair. Try
Cardui, the woman’s tonic. It lias helped
more than a million women, in its 50
years of continuous success, and should
surely help you, too. Your druggist has
sold Cardui for years. He knows what
it will do. Ask him. He will recom
mend it Begin taking Cardui today.
U'n'V to: Ch»it«r.!)oia MrJIcIne Co.. Ladlet*
Advisory Dept., Chattanooga. Tenn.. for Sl>ecia4
Jnstructioyis on your case and o4-page book, Homt
Treatment for Women." sen: in plain wraooer. ) v>«
ARRIVE from
(Jrtmn 10:5? A. m.
Chattanooga 1 i F. m.
Ceilartovrn 6:4 1a.m.
ColumbOA 9:40 A u.
DEFART FOR
7:17 p.m. Griffiu 6.4U.M.
Chattanooga 11 :rt > a. m,
Odartowu 1:20 p. m.
6:39 p.m. Colum bus 7:55 a.m.
5:16 P-M
Ask these good people what they say about the
Majestic Range. You will have no more trouble
when you make up your mind to get a Majestic.
THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST. Here are some
of our customers—we haven't space to mention all.
B. T. Thompson
T. F. Shackelford
J. A. Hunter
H. A. Hall
L. B. Mann
Jim Kilgo
Mrs. Jack Powell
W. H. Reynolds
Sanders Gibson
Mike Powell
C. A. Payne
W. G. Post
H. C. Glover
Guy Cole
J. B. Hutchens
A. A. Passolt
Mrs. H. W. Seibe
Mrs. W. W. Spence
P. F. Cuttino
Robt. Orr
R. J. Stewart
G. T. Stocks
T. A. Hutchens
C. J. Barron
E. R. Barrett
J. P. Jones
Miss Mary Bolton
We would like to mention others, but space is
limited.
JOHNSON HARDWARE GOMPANY
Phone 81 Newnan, Ga.
Ttve"WoiLcter Car’
No “Extras” To Buy
The new Maxwell is complete in every detail.
A famous make of high-grade speedometer is
supplied. In addition to the equipment listed
below, the price of the car includes: Front license
bracket, ingenious combination rear license
and tail-light bracket with spare tire carrier;
electric horn, robe rail, anti-skid rear tires, foot
accelerator, full set of tools, etc., etc.
We are waiting to take you for a
test ride in the car that has broken
all low “First-Cost” records, and is
breaking all low “After-Cost” records.
"OneMariMohairlop
Be mountable J{ims
Rgin VisionWbidshield
Electric Starter
LSIectricLights
f o Ignition
1
■
Every Egadis a Alaxwell Rxid ’
Coweta Auto Sales Company
NEWNAN. GA.
Laxative Cold Breakers
are guaranteed to cure
your cold or your mon
ey refunded. For sale
by J. F. Lee Drug Co.