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NEWNAN HERALD
NEWNAN, FRIDAY, FEB. 18
THE OLD OAKEN ADVERTISER
How dear to our heart* ia tho old advnrtlnor.
Who runa hh atuff flfty-two wroka In the year;
He turns up on Monday with (rood, anappy copy
‘ b blue* wllhhla laughter und
And drlvca out the t
cheer.
He never aaya. "Kill It, tho pooplo won’t road It,'
"It don’t do no good," nor "I can’t stand tho
pace,"
But cornea to the front (with his check) like a
major,
And sometimes aaya, "Bill, hotter double that
space."
Oh. the old advertiser, the good advortiaer.
Tho safe advertiser, wo all lovo so well.
—Publisher*’ Bulletin.
The Freedon of the Press,
Madison Madisonian.
The Menace, an anti-Catholic paper
publiahed at Aurora, MlBBouri, was ar
raigned in the Federal Court at Joplin,
Mo., last Monday charged with violat
ing section 211 of the Penal Code by
sending through tho United States
malls certain matter alleged to be ob
scene. Following so closely upon the
trial of Thomas E. Watson at Augusta,
charged with a Bimilar offense, the trial
of Tho Menace ia of more than passing
interest and importance. The Madison
ian holds no brief for defending either
Mr. Watson or Tho Menace. And yet
it looks like there is “something rotten
in Denmark,” since the prosecutions
both grew out of the publication of ar
ticles attacking tho Catholic church.
Mr. Watson merely quoted extracts
from Catholic books. The Menace did
the same thing, for which, evidently,
it is haled into the United States
Courts, charged with a violation of the
postal laws by sending obscene matter
through the mails. Tho books circu
lated by the church of Rome are al
lowed circulation in the mails, but it
Beems to be a crime for an American
newspaper or journalist to quote from
thoso bonks—especially if the quota
tions are used in an attack upon the
Catholic church. For those reasons,
therefore, The Madisonian believeB
that every loyal American should stsnd
by The Menace when it asks:
“Has It come to pass in this country
that any organization is so strong and
so powerful that it can say to the
world, ‘I will do as I please; I will say
what I please; I will print what 1 please
and 1 will teach what I please, and no
one can say me nay.'
“Has it come to pass that tho Roman
Catholic church can uso tho mails for
circulating matter which is never ques
tioned, but for the publi.'ation of which
ProtestantB and Freemasons must be
haled into court and tried as common
criminals?
“Has it come to pass that there is
one law in this free United States for
Catholics and another for Protestants?
“Is it perfectly legitimate to publish
the truth about any other organization
under the shining sun and criminal to
print the truth about the Roman Cath
olic church and its political machine?
“Has it come to pass that the Roman
Hierarchy can mako free use of the
machinery of Government to punish its
enemies and reward its friends?
"Has this foreign organization be
come so strongly entrenched in the
land of Lincoln and Joiferaon that it
baa again establish the inquisition and
put the Government agents heresy
hunting?
“la tho money of the tax-paying,
liborty-loving citizens of thiB nation to
be used by the Government in putting
all critics of this foul and filthy Bystem
on the rack?
"These are a few of the questions
the people are asking, and which they
are expecting to have answered at Jop
lin!"
CAPT. A. H. MILLER
GAINS 23 POUNDS
It iB not the beat policy in the world
to be always telling somebody else
what you intend to do. The story soon
gets to be very tiresome. When you
want to do anything and are placed in
the position to do it, jump right in.
BEST TREATMENT
Southern Ry. Conductor Says His
Wonderful Restoration To Health
Is Talk of the Yards.
“Yes, sir, it is a fact; I have taken
seven bottles of Tanlac and have
gained twenty-three pounds,” said
Captain A. H. Miller, one of the best
known railroad men in Knoxville.
"Before I began taking It,” he con
tinued, “I only weighed one hundred
and flfty-one pounds. I now weigh
one hundred and Beventy-four pounds
and feel like a sixteen-year-oid boy.”
Captain Miller, who is the conductor
on trains Nos. 73 and 74, plying be
tween Knoxville and Harriman, on the
Southern railway, had just arrived in
Knoxville, checked out his train and
reached his attractive home on Scott
street, when he was met by the Tanlac
man.
I am indeed glad you called,” said
Capt. Miller, as he shook the hand of
the Tanlac representative and invited
him into his Bpacious parlor. "For
several weeks Mrs. Miller and myself
have been reading the testimonials of
Knoxville citizens regarding the bene
ficial effects derived from taking this
wonderful medicine, and I had prom
ised my wife to go up to the KuhlmBn
Chambless Drug Company’s drug store
and tell them what Tanlac had done for
me, but have been too buBy.
“My restoration to health is the talk
of the railroad yards, and every day I
am being congratulated by my friends
upon how well I look.
1 T had for years been afflicted with
catarrh and stomach trouble,” con
tinued Capt. Miller, “and when spring
came I was in a wretched run-down
condition, a walking skeleton, if you
please, and just had to drag myself
about. Before I became afflicted with
the terrible double complaint I weighed
190 pounds, and was strong, robust and
healthy. I went from bad to worBe
and occasionally was patched up, but
nothing I took in the way of medical
treatment reached the spot, and I was
on the verge of taking an extended lay
off from my duties.
"I could scarcely eat anything at all,
and what I did eat seemed to Bour on
my stomach. I would All up with gas
and seemed to be bloated all the time,
and my suffering was intense. My
stomach would pain me and burn like a
coal of fire. I was bo constipated 1
had to take a purgative pellet every
night to get any temporary relief. I
was cross and fretful and so nervous
that I never enjoyed a night's sleep.
Hisslng'steam, the noise of the .train
and the ringing of the bell grated' on
my nerves, and all through the hours of
the night I could hear these noises.
At times I would have dizzy spells
and would stagger and frequently had
palpitation of the heart. This was my
condition when I heard of Tanlac. I
was willing try anything to get well,
and started in on a bottle. In a few
days I noticed a marked improvement
in my condition; and sent and bought
six more bottles. I have taken Beven
bottles, and here I am, in better health
than I have enjoyed for twenty years.
1 can eat anything, have gained
twenty-three pounds, as I told you be
fore; I am not constipated at all, eat
hearty, sleep well and of mornings my
wife has to pull me out of bed I sleep
so soundly. I sleep all night without
hearing steam whiBtlea and moving cars,
and my nerves are now Btrong and I
hardly know myself, so great has been
my transformation from a weak, run
down man to a strong, robust, healthy
condition that is the talk of all those
who know me.”
Tanlac is sold by leading druggists
in all principal cities of the South.
Tanlac is sold exclusively in Newnan
by Odom Drug Co.; in Moreland by L.
S. & A. Q. Young; in Senoia by Holl-
berg’s Pharmacy; in Grantville by Cul-
breath’s Pharmacy; in Turin by Turin
Drug Co.; in Raymond by The Far
mers’ Supply Co.; in Sharpsburg by
the City Drug Store.—Adv.
S. S. S. Removes the Cause.
Specialists In Cntarrli troubles have
agreed that It Is an Inofctlon of the
blood. The laboratories of tho S. 3. S.
Co. at Atlanta, have proven It. Once
you got your blood froe from Impuri
ties—cleansed of tho Catarrhal poi
sons, which It Is now a prey to be
cause of Its unhealthy stats—you will
bo relieved of Catarrh—the dripping
In the throat, hawking and spitting,
raw sores In Uie nostrils, and the dis
agreeable bad breath. It was caused,
In the first place, because your Impov
erished blood w-as easily Infected. Pos
sibly a slight cold or contact with
someone who had a cold. But the point
Is—don't suffer with Cstarrh—It Is not
necessary. The romody. S. 3. 3., dis
covered over fifty years ago, tested,
true and tried, .te always obtainable at
any drug store., it-ties proven tts veluo
In thousands of cases. It will do so
In your cess. Set B. S. 3. at onoe and
begin treatment. If yours Is a long
standing case, be sure to write the
Swift .Specific Co- Atlanta, as., for
ircc expert medical advice. They wltt
tell you how this purely vegetable
blood tonic cleanses the Impurities
from the blood shy literally washing
It clean. They will-prove to you that
thousands of sufforora from Catarrh,
after coaslstent treatment with 3. 3. S.,
hs,v.- been froed from the trouble and
all its disagreeable features and re
stored to health and vigor. Don't do
lay the treatment Toko 3. 3. 3. at
oace.
This May Interest You.
If you suffer with pains in your back
or side, stiff and sore muscles or joints,
or rheumatic aches, or have symptoms
of kidney trouble, such ns puffy swell
ings under the eyes or sleep-disturbing
bladder ailments, you should know that
Foley’s Kidney Pills have benefltted
thousands in like condition. J. F. Lee
Drug Co.
No one is anxious about a young man
while be iB busy in useful work. But
where does he eat his lunch at noon?
Where does he go when he leaves his
boarding-house at night? What does
he do after supper? Where does he
spend hia Sundays and holidays? The
way be uaea hia a pa re momenta reveals
his character. The great majority of
youths who go to the bad are ruined
after eupper. Most of them who climb
upward to honor and fame devote their
evenings to study or work, or the so
ciety of those who can help and im
prove them. Each evening is a crisis
in the career of a young man.
Out This Out—It is Worth Money.
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
Tar Compound, for
coughs, colds and croup; Foley’s Kid-
y's Hi
ths, co
Pills, i
J. F. Lee Drug Co.
ne^PiUs, and Fojey's Cathartic Tablets.
Business-like Solution.
A man in Washington, Ga., baa writ
ten to the Augusta Chronicle to give
give his suggestion about how to solve
the cotton acreage problem. His idea
ia that all the farmer., want is the es
tablishment of a cash market for grain
in each county. This would, of course,
offer an incentive and an assurance to
the farmers, and would do more to cut
down this year’s crop and raise the
price of the crop than any other single
thing that could be done. The writer
says that the difficulties of establishing
a cash market for grain in each sep-
arate county are not so great as would
appear, as any one man with as much
as $500 to invest could readily establish
a market, as he could ship his grain im
mediately upon buying a car-load and
cash his draft with the bill of lading
attached just as he now handles drafts
for cotton. No expensive warehouse
is needed for the enterprise; all that is
necessary is for a single man or a small
syndicate to let the farmers know that
cash will be offered them for grain.
The gentleman offering this simple
and sensible solution of the cotton prob
lem does not care to be known, but
he says he has talked to the prominent
farmers of his county and that he re
ceived several ready assurances that if
a cash market could be established for
grain they would plant no cotton at al).
Others Baid they would be glad to cut
their cotton crops in half. He says/
“If tbe people expect to raise any
quantity of grain this year It is neces
sary for them to plant now, and if one-
third of the present cotton area is
planted in grain by early spring the
cotton crop of this year is absolutely
cut down that much. There iB no dan
ger of growing too much grain thia
year because it will be impossible if the
war were to atop to-day to get the men
now included in the armieB of Europe
back to their fields in time to plant a
crop for this year. We can’t have
too much grain on the market at any
time within the next twelve months,
under any possible condition. There is
only one possible matter that I see
which will affect the South as a grain
market, and that is the fact that the
railroads have not published through
rates from points in the South to the
ports, because there has never been any
such movement of grain; but if the
grain is offered for shipment in any
quantity the railroads will at once pub
lish rates, which can be done in thirty
days.”
We believe there ia sound sense and
economy in this scheme. The Southern
business man muBt see that the next
season will be a great grain season, and
that they will profit by buying grain
for cash, both in the sale of tbe grain
and in the protection and Baving value
of tbe cotton already being held for
market.
CITROLAX
CITROLAX
CITROLAX
Beat thing for constipation, sour
stomach, lazv liver and sluggish bowels.
Stops sick headache almost at once.
Gives a most thorough and satisfactory
flushing—no pain, no nausea. Keeps
yonr Bystem cleansed, sweet and whole
some. Ask for citrolax. J. F. Lee
Drug Co.
When a true man asks a woman to
be his wife it is because he loves her,
and it doesn’t make a fraction of dif
ference what Bhe doea. So long aa mem
ory holds its own and reason lasts she
will live in bis thoughts, and, dead or
divorced, she will come back to him in
his moods and dreams. She was the
queen of his home, tbe companion of
his first manhood, and involuntarily he
wilt compare other women with her.
He can’t forget her. The sound of her
voice comes back to him; he hears her
gentle laugh; her timid, honest brown
eyes look into hiB when he is alone, and
the perfume that was her favorite he
can detect among a hundred others,
The rare dishes she with her dainty
little hands prepared for him, and a
thousand other things, bring her back
to'remind him of his loss.
a geor6ia woman
TESTIFIES.
Nervous, Sleepless, Pains In
Back, Neck and Shoulders.
Atlanta, Ga.—"l ean endorse Doctor
Pierce’s Favorite Prescription as a most
excellent medicine to meet all of the
conditions of diseases of womankind.
I can testify from my own experience.
I suffered from nervous debility, which
affected me to such a measure that I
often had to lie down to quiet my ex
cited nerves. The irritated nerves also
kept me awake many a night. I did
not eat enough to sustain my body,
and grew weaker. To add to my
affliction I had spasmodic pains in
neck, shoulders, and in my back. The
use of the ‘ Favorite Prescription ’
worked a gratifying change. I am
grateful for the renewed health I re
ceived and am sure that others will be
as well rewarded in taking it.” — Mrs.
E. J. Chastebn, 84 Hampton Street,
Atlanta, Ga.
Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is
a true friend to women in times of
trial and at times of pain when the
organs are not performing their func
tions. For headache, backache, hot
flashes, catarrhal condition, bearing
down sensation, mental depression,
dizziness, fainting spells, lassitude and
exhaustion, women should never fail
to take this tried and true woman’s
medicine.
Prepared from nature’s roots and
herbs, it contains no alcohol or nar
cotic, nor any harmful ingredient.
In either tablet or liquid form. Write
Dr.Pierce, Invalids’Hotel,Buffalo, N.Y.,
to-day. Get book on women’s diseases,
sent free.
Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets are the
original little' Liver Pills. These tiny,
sugar-coated, anti-bilious granules—the
smallest and the easiest to take. One
little "Pellet” for a laxative—three for
a cathartic.
Advertise
in the
Bell Directory
Your advertisement in
the Bell telephone direc
tory places your business
before the leading people
in the community. Bell
subscribers are almost
without exception able to
buy the goods you ad
vertise.
Bell directory advertis
ing does not conflict
with any other medium.
It is the most permanent
and persistent of all me
diums and is consulted
more frequently than
any other list or refer
ence book.
Ask the Manager for
rates.
SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE
AND TELEGBAPH COMPANY
ANTISEPTIC POWDER
FOR PERSONAL HYGIENE
Diuolved in water for douche* stop*
pelvic catarrh, ulceration and inflam
mation. Recommended by Lydia E.
Pinkham Med. Co. for ten years.
A healing wonder for nasal catarrh,
tore throat and sore eyes. Economical.
H« extmonfinaiy cleansing and germicidal power.
Sample Free, 50c. all druggists, or postpaid by
^jnaiL_TjmPaxtoQ Toilet Company. Boston, Man, ^
Ol< >K< >Mt # )£]< )f(< >fti >fti )Hi if ( o
It Always Helps
says Mrs. Sylvania Woods, of Clifton Mills, Ky., in
writing of her experience with Cardui, the woman’s
tonic. She says further: “Before 1 began to use
Cardui, my back and head would hurt so bad, I
thought the pain would kill me. I was hardly able
to do any of my housework. After taking three bottles
of Cardui, I began to feel like a new woman. I soon
gained 35 pounds, and now, I do all my housework,
as well as run a big water mill.
I wish every suffering woman would give
CARDUI
The Woman’s Tonic
a trial
and
I still use Cardui when I feel a little -bad,
{ t always does me good.” „ _
ieadache, backache,, side ache, nervousness,
tired, worn-out feelings, etc., are sure signs of woman
ly trouble. Signs that you need Cardui, the woman’s
tonic. You cannot make a mistake in trying Cardui
for your trouble. It has been helping weak, ailing
women for more than fifty years.
Get a Bottle Today!
All Our Wagons
Have an accurate
steering attachment
and are guided like
an automobile. The
wooden parts are
thoroughly sea
soned. One of them
will make your boy or girl happy.
BIG RAZOR SALE
A working model of the JJ15 Durham Duplex Ra
zor on sale at our store at
lO CENTS EACH
’Phone 81
Your
Orders
For household needs in groceries, if
placed at my store, will be filled prompt
ly, efficiently, and with the highest grade-
goods. I handle nothing but what I know
to be reliable, fresh, pure and wholesome,
whether of necessities or luxuries. Give
me a trial order and see if what I say is
not true. Fresh Fish, Oysters and Celery
every Friday and Saturday.
Swints
Phone 54
Your Appetite
Needs No Whetting
When you eat our Groceries, Fruits and Veg
etables. For freshness and genuine all-round
deliciousness they have no equal.
You buy the REAL ARTICLE when you
come to us, and your money goes a long way.
Foreign and domestic Fruits and fresh Veg
etables every day.
TWO ’PHONES—22
Jas. M. Wadsworth
West Side Court Square
Three Through Trains to
CINCINNATI
r
And Points North
Lv. Atlanta .... 6:20 a. m. 4:50 ,g.. m. 8:20 p. m.
Ar. Chattanooga. 10:55 a. m. 9:35p'.m. 1:05 a.m.
.^r;-Cincinnati... 9:15 p. m. 8:10 a.-jtl 11:40 a.,in.
-4 Dining Cars, Sleeping Cars, Coaches.
For further information address
R. L. BAYLOR, D. P. A., Atlanta, Ga.
QOUTHEPN PAILWAY