The Newnan herald. (Newnan, Ga.) 1915-1947, January 28, 1916, Image 1

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C S 'fuller 9S(pll THE NEWNAN HERALD ^JRALD I Consolidated with Coweta Advertiser September, 1886. i Established 1866. 1 Consolidated with Newnan News January, 1916. I NEWNAN, GA., FRIDAY, JANUARY 28, 1916. Vol. 51—No. 18 Spring Tailoring Opening Thursday, Friday and Saturday, Feb. 3, 4 and 5 M0 Here at our store on the dates named above we will show a grand display of the latest styles and models in men’s and young men’s Fine Custom-Tailoring. All the new fabrics of the season will be shown by an expert designer and cutter from BROS. a no■ jurur vnou NEW YORK THIS is a semi-annual event with us, the advance showing of the latest styles in men’s and young men’s Fine Tailoring, dem onstrated by an expert from SCHLOSS BROS. & CO., the famous Baltimore style-makers. It affords you an opportunity to see what is considered most fashionable on Fifth avenue, New York, and what the best custom-tailors all over the country will show this spring. SCHLOSS BROS. & CO. selections include the choicest woolens and worsteds from both foreign and do mestic mills—goods ordinarily confined to custom sliops which ask from $60 up for a suit of clothes. THEY WILL COST YOU HALF THAT HERE. Fine Clothes Made as You Want Them N ' \ ■ * ' THE satisfaction of having clothes perfectly tailored to your measure—made exactly as you want them—is worth a great deal. No ordinary clothes fully satisfy the largfe class of well-dressed men who want the distinction and individuality which the best Custom Tailored Garments give. If you belong, to that class, it will certainly pay you to order through us. We can save you money, and give you the best-fitting, most attractive clothes you ever had. COME AND SEE. P. F. YOUR FORD IS READY NOW And as you ride you pay. Nothing could better demonstrate my faith in the Ford’s ability to stand up. Nothing could better demonstrate my certain ty that you will be pleased with the streamline •body, the splendid appearance, the ready motor. Ask for my term proposition. WALTER HOPKINS ’ 25 Perry Street. NEWNAN, GA. ’Every Woman Wants ANTISEPTIC powder FOR PERSONAL HYGIENE Dissolved In water for douches stops pelvic catarrh, ulceration and inflam mation. Recommended by Lydia E. Pinkham Med. Co, for ten years. A healing wonder for nasal catarrh, sore throat and sore eyes. Economical. Has extraordinary cfennnna sod genmesdal power, 3Ample Free. 50c. all drureisis, or postpaid by - nw. TKtP-etnnTrfl-tCompany. Po«oo. Mass. Executor's Sale. GEORGIA—Coweta County; Agreeable to so order granted by the Coart of Ordinary at the January term, 1916,1 will sell be fore the coart-house door, in the city of Newnan, said coanty. on the first Tuesday In February. 1916. to the highest and best bidder, the following lands belonging to th«J estate of Allan West, late of said county, deceased, to-wit: All of the south half of lot of land No. 9, tn the original Sixth (now Seventh) district of Coweta county, Ga., (except one ond one-quarter acres more or leas, in the southwest quarter of said lot) containing one hundred (100) acres, more or leas, and bounded as follows: On the north by lands of Willis West, on the east by lands of J. R. McCol lum and T. B. Davis, on the south by lands of T. B. Davis, and on the west by M. C. Bridges place. Sold for the purpose of paying debts of estate of said Allan West, deceased. Terms of sale— ■CASH. This Jan. 6.1916. Pr* fee. $6.91 MRS. SALLIE WEST, Executor of the will of AJ;an West, J THE IDJj E RICH. Milady breakfasts In her room, In fetching cap and gown;. Then exercises for an hour To keep her figure down. * Next, bathed and manicured and dressed. She stepB into her car, To shop where filmiest lingerie And Paris chapeaux arel She lunches out, then motors back To changg her clothes again; ‘ An afternoon at auction now— Highballs and tea—and then ’Tis time to hurry home to don A lovely evening frock To dine somewhere, and onestep Till 3 a. m, by the clock I The dansant. cards and opora. The newest matinee. With fashion’s whimsies, leave'unfilled No hour of night or day. No horny-handed son of toil Works half aa hard as she. Who labors all her time to shine In smart society 1 —[Mazie V. Caruthers. The Fertilizer Problem. Atlanta Constitution. For what little potash he getB this year the farmer must look to cotton seed meal. He will recall the high price he received fop his cotton seed last fall. This naturally means a high er price for the fertilizer into which cotton seed meal enters as an essential ingredient. But this is the one source ofa little potash for cotton this year, and there ia hardly a question that every pound of it will be carefully used so as to get the beBt results. The fertilizer situation, as it presents itself to the Southern farmer to-day, with the potash entirely shut off and the price of all materials greatly en hanced, ia perhapB the best lesson ever read him Upon the importance of grow ing cattle at home. There never was and never will boa better fertilize* than the home-made manure, and the far mer who is well supplied with that pro duct now is most fortunate. Not only that, bat the more the sail is built up with this product and the turning un der of nitrogenous crops, the more quickly does growing life respond to the small amount of artificial fertilizer placed under it. The manufacturers and mjxers of fertilizers in the South to-day have no fear but that they will be able to dis pose of every pound of material they make. With them it is a question now of being unable to supply the inevit able demand. They cannot do it, be cause of their inability to secure all the materials needed. Many of those ma terials have been requisitioned at far higher prices than the manufacturer or the farrier could afford to pay, for the purpose of makisg explosives. The condition is one that will unques tionably impress upon the farmer the important lesson of home conservation. Whether fertilizers are high or low, those that he makes at home mean not only a saving of cash outlay, but actual farm profits. This Happened iij 1915. Christian Herald. - , A year ago a young man—his name doesn’t matter—made a sensible New Year resolution. He had been married a few years; he received a small salary and had been mortgaging bis future— drifting into debt. The sums he owed were not large, but they were larger than he seemed able to shake off, and his wants were steadily increasing. He determined to get rid of the dead ening weight at any sacrifice. His work was such that he could work overtime and get extra pay for it. He had perfect health, and discovered for the first time that it was valuable cap ital, He put that health and strength and skill of his into the smelting mill, and they assayed pure gold. He found in time that while he was making more money than before, he was also making himself more efficient As his purpose grew in seriousness, his wants became more simple. He was finding ideals the attainment of which call for no expenditure. He had set out to pay his debts be fore the end of the year. He had cleaned them all up within a few months. But be did not cease his ef forts . He had found something more than mere freedom from debt—some thing even more valuable than that. He had been fulfilling his obligation to his employer, which meant that bis work had been up to the average. Now, he was fulfilling his obligation to him self also, which meant that his work waa far above the average. His em ployer could not fail to see it and ap preciate it. , A good bank account in his own name to-day helps this young man to see the vast difference between being a slave of circumstances and a master of them. y The Gist of It. "Last December I Jiad a very severe cold and was nearly down sick in bed I bought two bottles of Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy and it was only a few days until I was completely restored to health,” writes O. J. M. tealf, Weather- by, Mo. If you would know th • valu or this remedy, ask any one who ha used it. Obtainable everywhere; Objects of Charity. The Fourth Estate. Space, and copies of hia paper, go to make up the newspaper man’B entire stock in trade. These two are all that he has to offer for sale to the public, and no one has yet given any sort of satisfactory reasons why ho should ever be asked to donate them. One thing newspaper people wi 11 never be ablo to understand is why any per son will walk into a newspaper office and make himself or herself an object of charity and insist upon what they would disdain to ask for in any other Bhop pr place of buBinesa in the town. The-principle is the same in the news paper office as in the dry goods store, the grocery, the drug store, and what a great many people need is to recog nize it as the same thing. Advertising space in the paper is for sale, not to give away. It has a cer tain value of itself that makes it worth money. Copies of the newspaper are for sale—not to give away. If ’they are worth having, they are worth the exceedingly small pries asked for them. The public -or at least a large por tion of it—has some very erroneous ideas about these matters, and it 1b but just to the newspaper folk that their ideas be corrected in accordance with the same business principles that pre vail in ail other business establishments. In a vast majority of cases this gen erous charity on the part of the news papers ia blissfully taken for granted, and the paper’s liberality ia abused. That which is purely a favor ia accepted as a matter of course, and what should be requests are couched aa demands. When the courtesy has been per formed there is rarely even apprecia tion, and more often dissatisfaction— generally silence. The result in many towns and cities is that a ban has been put upon all free publicity, no matter what its object. In these cities such favors as the press bestows are therefore properly apprecia ted and valued. Six-Year-Old Had Croup. “I have a little girl 0 years old who has a great deal of trouble with croup," writes W. E Curry, of Evansville, Ind. "I have used Foley’s Honey and Tar, obtaining instant relief for her. My wife and I also use it and will say it is the heap cure for a bad cold, cough, throat trouble and croup that I ever -•aw ” Those terrible coughs that seem to tear o ■ to pi BCefl yield to Fol y’B Honey an i Tar, 3. F, Lee Drug Co. DOUBLY PROVEN. Newnan Readers Oan No Longer Doubt the Evidence. This Newnan citizen testified long ago. Toid of quick relief—of undoubted benefit. The facts are now confirmed. Such testimony Is complete—the evi dence conclusive. . It forms convlncingproof of merit. W. T. Lazenby, 04 Wesley St., New nan, says; "The kidney secretions were toe frequent In passage and I suffered from backache for several years. I tried different remedies but they all failed to correct the trouble. Doan’s Kidney Pills, procured from the J, F. Lee Drug Co., gave me immediate re lief.” The above statement was given Feb. 12, 1908, and on Feb. 20, 1915, Mr. Lazenby said: "I still use Doan's Kidney Pills once in a while and they keep my back and kidneys in good con dition.” Price 60c„ at all dealers. Don’t sim- B ly ask for a kidney remedy — get loan’s Kidney Pills—the same that Mr. Lazenby had. Foster-Milburn Co., PropB,, Buffalo, N. Y, “I wiBh,” sighed Freddie, plaintively, “I wish 1 was Billy Smith.” "Why, Freddie!" said his astonished mother. "Billy Smith has none of the nice things you have. He doesn't get any-pocket money, abd he isn’t as big as you, and he's not nearly so strong.. HIb father never buys him presents, or—” "I know all about that, tuamtha," said Freddie, "but—” ‘And think what nice hooka you have. And yon never have to go out in the cold and wet to carry papers and—" "I know,” grumbled Freddie, an noyed by bis mother’s Btrange lack of understanding, “but Billy kin wiggle his ears!” JACKSON, MISS., MAN Tells How To Core Chronio Cough. Jackson, Miss.—“I am a carpenter, and the grippe left me with a chronic cough, run-down, worn out and weak. I toolrbll kinds of cough syrups without help. I read about Vinol and decided to try it. Before I had taken a bottle I felt better, and after taking two bottles my cough is entirely cured, and I have gained new vim and energy.’’—John L. Vinol ia a delicious cod liver and iron tonic, guaranteed for coughs, colds and bronchitis and for all weak, run-down conditions, JOHN K. CATES DRtJG CO.. Newnan. On.